Embark in a sentence as a verb

That's not a path I'm going to embark on.

I have often called this 'throwing myself to the wolves' when I embark on a new endeavor...I know it will be hard.

In general, Go is kept very distinct from Google, so it wouldn't make much sense for Google to embark on a Go marketing campaign.

Sadly more often than not this results in a huge time-sink, as you embark in an uphill battle against a tool-chain that's strongly optimized for the exact opposite.

The only solution now is to embark on a data mining expedition so that artificial intelligence will tell us how to make better software.

He finally chose to embark on "an experiment, to find what a single individual [could] contribute to changing the world and benefiting all humanity.

I am also strongly convinced that Rails is never the right solution; as long as I'm employed at this organization, it will embark upon a new Rails project only over my metaphorical smoking corpse.

> It takes some serious entrepreneurial skills and mindset\n > to embark on a problem which is seemingly impossible, and\n > never giving up until the solution has been derived.\n\nNothing specifically entrepreneurial about that, really.

> What I'd really like to know is what process does the President-elect endure that turns him into an alien lizard from ****?A Truman-era bureaucrat coined the phrase, "where you stand depends on where you sit."When Obama was outside the executive branch and had only a year of Senate experience before embarking upon his presidential campaign, he had a very different set of interests and responsibilities.

Embark definitions

verb

go on board

See also: ship

verb

set out on (an enterprise or subject of study); "she embarked upon a new career"

See also: enter

verb

proceed somewhere despite the risk of possible dangers; "We ventured into the world of high-tech and bought a supercomputer"

See also: venture