English to Portuguese Dictionary embark

embark

embarcar
definition
verb
he embarked for India in 1817
go on board a ship, aircraft, or other vehicle.
translation of 'embark'
verb
embarcar
example
The host mother ship is notified and called to a port to 'embark' the eleven-strong rescue team of specialist divers and technical officers together with the rescue submersible and its associated equipment.
At the start of the deployment, HMS Invincible will 'embark' both FA2 Sea Harrier fighters and RAF Ground attack aircraft as well as her Sea King helicopters.
The couple's claim was that the liner should have taken ‘all reasonable steps to 'embark' passengers reasonably late returning.’
As soon as the ship started to float again we re-embarked and with night starting to fall we moored alongside a ship ready to 'embark' lorries to be landed in the early hours of the next day.
But the Pacific purpose for which they were created involves the capacity to 'embark' an army battalion, to operate three helicopters from the flight deck and carry four other helicopters.
Just at the moment Spartacus expects to 'embark' his army and followers aboard the Silesian ships, news of betrayal and of Roman armies converging on his position causes Spartacus to radically revise his plans.
We landed on our ship, refueled and 'embarked' a rescue swimmer.
In 1699, at the age of fifty-two, she 'embarked' for Surinam with her daughter Dorothea Maria.
The ship 'embarked' the Lord Provost of Glasgow for the final part of the voyage to her berth at Yorkhill Quay, and the ship will be open to visitors on Saturday November 11 from 1300-1700.
Over two thousand Polish troops have 'embarked' for Iraq to join the security effort there.
At both 'embarkment' and disembarkment points, you are able to visit the ports of Juneau, Ketchikan and Skagway.
Should an individual, upon discovering an intruder in his house, first question him as to his intent before 'embarking upon' a course of action?
Leaving Rome and ignoring a summons to stand trial, he 'embarked' for Greece, where Quintus Braetius Sura, a legate of the commander in Macedonia, had already driven the enemy back to the sea.
Might he not, on reflection, have regretted 'embarking on' this particular course?
This period will cover Exercise Allied Action 05, for which Admiral Cooke and SFN Staff will be 'embarked' in the command ship USS Mount Whitney off the Mediterranean coast of Spain.
On 18 January William V 'embarked' for England as groups of patriots ousted his minions from power in town after town across the country.
They were 'embarked' aboard transport ships, not planetary assault ships.
Upon 'embarkation' , an account is automatically set up for the passengers to which most shipboard services may be signed and charged.
At least my 'embarkment' onto the dancefloor prompted everyone else in the club to join - I guess they figured they'd HAVE to look cooler than me.
Robin and Michael 'embarked' for France in early June 1944.
He said prospective students should think long and hard before 'embarking on' an expensive course.
Along with many others escaping Europe, the couple 'embarked' for Rio de Janeiro in June 1940, with no national passports but with travel documents issued by the League of Nations.
He 'embarks on' his course of inquiry with an anarchist's instinctive mistrust of power.
The CTOL type would appear to offer a number of advantages, especially in terms of the range of aircraft that can be 'embarked' .
Those 'embarking on' the course are expected to work very hard from wake-up to sleep-time.
In January 1943 Miller 'embarked' for England, having gained his flying badge as an airman pilot the previous November.
Tens of thousands of refugees 'embarked' for the United States.
This can be the deciding factor as to whether someone should 'embark on' a course of therapy at all!
From February onward army and blackshirt militia units mobilized and 'embarked' for the long journey through the Suez Canal to Eritrea and Somalia.
A third project being championed by Prodi is for the restoration of the Italian leg of a pilgrimage to the Holy Land on which pilgrims once 'embarked' for Jaffa and Jerusalem at the port of Brindisi.
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