march
English
Pronunciation
- (UK) IPA(key): /mɑːtʃ/
- (US) enPR: märch, IPA(key): /mɑɹt͡ʃ/
Audio (US): (file) - Rhymes: -ɑː(ɹ)tʃ
- Homophone: March
Etymology 1
From Middle English marchen, from Middle French marcher (“to march, walk”), from Old French marchier (“to stride, to march, to trample”), from Frankish *markōn (“to mark, mark out, to press with the foot”), from Proto-Germanic *markōną (“to mark”). Akin to Old English mearc, ġemearc (“mark, boundary”). Compare mark, from Old English mearcian.
Noun
march (plural marches)
- A formal, rhythmic way of walking, used especially by soldiers, by bands, and in ceremonies.
- A journey so walked.
- Hypernym: journey
- A political rally or parade.
- 2009 October 21, Dennis Hevesi, “Jack Nelson, Journalist, Dies at 80”, in The New York Times, retrieved 12 June 2014:
- Mr. Nelson covered the Selma-to-Montgomery freedom marches, including Bloody Sunday, on March 7, 1965, when 600 marchers were attacked with billy clubs and tear gas.
- Any song in the genre of music written for marching (see Wikipedia's article on this type of music)
- Steady forward movement or progression.
- Synonyms: process, advancement, progression
- the march of time
- (euchre) The feat of taking all the tricks of a hand.
Derived terms
- countermarch
- dead march
- death march
- double march
- forced march
- force-march
- freedom march
- frog-march, frog march, frog's march
- funeral march
- gain a march on, get a march on
- grand march
- hour of march
- in a full march
- in march
- Jacksonian march
- Jarvis march
- line of march
- loaded march
- make a march
- march haemoglobinuria, march hemoglobinuria
- marchlike
- march-movement
- march music
- march-on
- march-order
- march out
- march-past
- march-time
- march to a different drummer
- March to the Sea
- march tumor, march tumour
- marchy
- minute of march
- on a march
- on the march
- outmarch
- quick march
- rogue's march
- route march, route-march, routemarch
- slow march
- snowball marches
- steal a march
- wedding march
Related terms
Translations
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- The translations below need to be checked and inserted above into the appropriate translation tables. See instructions at Wiktionary:Entry layout § Translations.
Verb
march (third-person singular simple present marches, present participle marching, simple past and past participle marched)
- (intransitive) To walk with long, regular strides, as a soldier does.
- 1864, United States War Department, The 1864 Field Artillery Tactics, Stackpole Books, published 2005, →ISBN, page 120:
- The column marching in double file, the instructor commands: […]
- (transitive) To cause someone to walk somewhere.
- 1967, Barbara Sleigh, Jessamy, Sevenoaks, Kent: Bloomsbury, published 1993, →ISBN, page 84:
- The old man heaved himself from the chair, seized Jessamy by her pinafore frill and marched her to the house.
- To go to war; to make military advances.
- 1746, Charles Pinot Duclos, The history of Lewis xi. king of France. Transl, page 169:
- The armies drawing constantly nearer to each other, the king advised with his council, whether he should march against the Britons, or sall upon the count of Gharolois.
- (figurative) To make steady progress.
- 1981 December 27, Wade Nichols, “Victorian Imperialism”, in Gay Community News, volume 9, number 23, page 5:
- Some say history repeats itself, that time is cyclical. Others cling to the notion of progress and change over time. Apparently Nancy Walker marches to a different drummer — marches backwards, that is. Her ideas on art and society seem quaint and odd on the one hand and, on the other, petty and regressive.
Derived terms
- an army marches on its stomach
- dismarch
- marcher
- marching
- march off
- march on
- march past
- march to a different beat
- march to a different drum
- march to one's own drum
- march to one's own drummer
- march to the beat of a different drum
- march to the beat of a different drummer
- march to the beat of one's own drum
- march to the beat of one's own drummer
- outmarch
- overmarch
- remarch
- slow-march
Translations
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- The translations below need to be checked and inserted above into the appropriate translation tables. See instructions at Wiktionary:Entry layout § Translations.
Etymology 2
From Middle English marche (“tract of land along a country's border”), from Old French marche (“boundary, frontier”), from Frankish *marku, from Proto-Germanic *markō, from Proto-Indo-European *mórǵs (“edge, boundary”).
Noun
march (plural marches)
- (now archaic, historical, often plural) A border region, especially one originally set up to defend a boundary.
- Synonyms: frontier, marchland, borderland
- Coordinate terms: county palatinate, county palatine
- 1819, Lord Byron, Don Juan, section IV:
- Juan's companion was a Romagnole, / But bred within the March of old Ancona […].
- (historical) A region at a frontier governed by a marquess.
Usage notes
Both march (noun) and land (noun) are predisposed idiomatically to be used in the plural such that a single region is conceived as a collection of smaller locales; thus, in the marches, in the borderlands, and in the badlands are often not different denotationally from in the march, in the borderland, and in the badland although they are trivially different grammatically and connotatively.
Derived terms
- Lord Warden of the Marches
- marcher
- march-gat
- march-land
- march-man
- marchman
- marchmount
- march parts, march-party
- March Pursuivant of Arms Extraordinary
- march stone
- march-ward
- Welsh Marches
Related terms
Translations
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- The translations below need to be checked and inserted above into the appropriate translation tables. See instructions at Wiktionary:Entry layout § Translations.
Verb
march (third-person singular simple present marches, present participle marching, simple past and past participle marched)
Translations
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Etymology 3
From Middle English merche, from Old English merċe, mereċe, from Proto-West Germanic *marik, from Proto-Indo-European *móri (“sea”). Cognate Middle Low German merk, Old High German merc, Old Norse merki (“celery”). Compare also obsolete or regional more (“carrot or parsnip”),[1] from Proto-Indo-European *mork- (“edible herb, tuber”).
Noun
march (plural marches)
- (obsolete) Smallage.
Translations
See also
- stanmarch (“Smyrnium olusatrum, alexanders”)
References
- ^ “march, n.1.”, in OED Online , Oxford: Oxford University Press, September 2000.
Anagrams
Atong (India)
Alternative forms
Etymology
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /mart͡ɕ/
Noun
march (Bengali script মার্চ)
Synonyms
References
- van Breugel, Seino. 2015. Atong-English dictionary, second edition. Available online: https://www.academia.edu/487044/Atong_English_Dictionary. Stated in Appendix 5.
Danish
Etymology
From French marche, derived from the verb marcher (“to march”). The interjection is borrowed from the French imperative of this verb.
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): [ˈmɑːɕ]
Noun
march c (singular definite marchen, plural indefinite marcher)
Interjection
march
- march! (an order)
Welsh
Etymology
From Middle Welsh march, from Proto-Brythonic *marx, from Proto-Celtic *markos.
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /marχ/
Noun
march m (plural meirch, feminine caseg)
Derived terms
- blodyn y meirch (“red campion”)
- cacwn meirch (“hornets”)
- cadfarch (“steed”)
- corfarch (“pony”)
- dynfarch (“centaur”)
- gwenyn meirch (“wasps”)
- marchddanhadlen (“horse nettle”)
- marchfacrell (“horse mackerel”)
- marchfieri (“dogroses”)
- marchfisglen (“horse mussel”)
- marchog (“knight, horserider”)
- marchrawn (“horsetails”)
- marchredyn (“male-ferns”)
- marchwellt (“couchgrass”)
- marchysgall (“spear thistles”)
- mintys y meirch, marchfintys (“horsemint”)