the idle air control motor could be bad, could have a clogged fuel fiter, strainer or sock on the fuel pump could be sucking together, gaskett around the throttle body may have a vaccum leak
Yes it can be an adjective: We walked past the parked cars.
a dock
It is possible that the lift pump of your 1997 Dodge is defective. In order to check whether this is the problem, it is best to contact the car manufacturer.
Hole in floor? Added by L024308 10-7-2008 I had this problem. If you open the hood you will find up toward the firewall where the cables enter the passenger compartment. It is up by the windshield on the far left and right by the fenders. GM chose to put tar in these corners to seal them from water entering. Depending on the attitude of the car when it is parked, rain water can collect in these areas. The tar in my Corsica was all cracked and allowed the water to enter and run down the inside firewall. I took regular roofing cement and thinned it out with mineral spirits them generously painted it into these corners. It stopped the water.
Yes, yes and yes.
Maybe a bad catalytic converter
Flat on the ground
The word "accelerate" means to travel faster, pick up speed ... how on earth can a car be parked and moving at the same time. Possibly meant, engine revs to higher RPM when stopped, which could be: Throttle Positioner problem
Maybe a weak fuel pump?
What makes you think it only leaks while parked. -
Such a vehicle is said to be parked.
They should have been lowered to the ground.
I believe you are "standing", not parked.
Probably in need of a tune up.
when can you cross a railroad track
If your car is running when parked then it is burning gas. Cars use gasoline to run the engine.
When a moving car hits a parked car and causes it to move, the kinetic energy of the moving car is transferred to the parked car. This increase in kinetic energy causes the parked car to start moving. Some of the energy is also dissipated as sound, heat, and deformation of the cars during the collision.