To remove from a park; to take something out of a parked position or a designated park area.
From de- (remove) + park (from Old French parc, meaning an enclosed area for animals). A straightforward English formation meaning to reverse the action of parking or park placement.
Depark is a delightfully simple word that rarely gets used because we just say 'leave the park' or 'drive away'—yet it perfectly mirrors the structure of more formal terms like depancreatize, showing that our language has the tools to create precision we usually don't bother with.
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