Webster dictionary was developed by Noah Webster in the beginning of 19th century. On this website, you can find definition for disembark from the 1913 edition of Webster's Revised Unabridged Dictionary. Define disembark using one of the most comprehensive free online dictionaries on the web.
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Part of Speech: noun
Results: 3
Part of Speech: verb
Part of Speech: verb transitive
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Examples of usage:
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When, for example, a neighbor approaches a farmhouse on horseback he is asked not to " alight" or to " dismount" but to " disembark," and he is invited not to " tie" his horse but to " moor" it. - "The French in the Heart of America", John Finley.
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He slept all the way during the homeward journey, waking refreshed and only a trifle stiff when he was called early in the morning to disembark. - "Jimmy Kirkland and the Plot for a Pennant", Hugh S. Fullerton.
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From the drawing- room window she had watched Ethne and Durrance meet at the foot of the terrace- steps, she had seen them walk together towards the estuary, she had noticed Willoughby's boat as it ran aground in the wide gap between the trees, she had seen a man disembark, and Ethne go forward to meet him. - "The Four Feathers", A. E. W. Mason.