Why this word is great
DISEMBOGUE — [Verb] To flow out, as a river, into a larger body of water; to discharge or pour out contents through a narrow opening. From Spanish desembocar, from des- (expressing reversal) + embocar ("to run into a creek or strait"), from boca ("mouth"). Unlike "debouch" (which precisely charts an emergence from confinement into openness, often of troops from a defile) or "emanate" (which suggests a gentle, often abstract, issuing forth of light or influence), "disembogue" insists on the physical, final release of a liquid burden. It is the ochre plume of the Mississippi surrendering its silt to the Gulf's indifferent blue, the muscular rush of a mountain stream from its rocky culvert into a placid lake, and the quiet gush of tea from a spout when the pot is tilted—a terminal act of release that marks not an end, but a quiet dissolution into a vaster, anonymous whole.