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Old 11-May-2008, 16:01
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Default to debark

"Most of the 264 passengers and 30 crew members debarked there Saturday morning, most of them in good spirits despite the ordeal."

hi,

I wonder if there is a very informal verb/phrasal verb that could replace this one, please.

thanks
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Old 11-May-2008, 16:08
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Default Re: to debark

Quote:
Originally Posted by jctgf View Post
"Most of the 264 passengers and 30 crew members debarked there Saturday morning, most of them in good spirits despite the ordeal."

hi,

I wonder if there is a very informal verb/phrasal verb that could replace this one, please.

thanks
"Landed" might work here or "left the plane".
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Old 11-May-2008, 16:19
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Default Re: to debark

Quote:
Originally Posted by banderas View Post
"Landed" might work here or "left the plane".

thanks.
I forgot to mention that the transportation means here is a train.
thanks again.
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Old 11-May-2008, 16:37
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Default Re: to debark

Quote:
Originally Posted by jctgf View Post
thanks.
I forgot to mention that the transportation means here is a train.
thanks again.
Then "got off the train" is pretty much informal.
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Old 11-May-2008, 17:59
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Default Re: to debark

Hi jctgf

Although I could recognise what it meant, I have never personally used the word "debark", and so checked it out in the various on-line dictionaries.

All suggest that it relates to ships or aircraft.

The word that I would have used would be "disembark", if I hadn't known that it was from a train - the suffix "-bark" comes from the French word "barque", which means a ship.

The informal way, as Banderas says, would be: "got off the train", in your case.

Regards
NT
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