marram
English
Etymology 1
From Old Norse maralmr, a compound of marr (“sea”) and halmr (“straw, reed”).
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /ˈmæɹəm/
Audio (Southern England): (file)
Noun
marram (countable and uncountable, plural marrams)
- Ammophila arenaria, a coarse grass found on sandy beaches.
- Synonyms: beachgrass, marram grass, matgrass, sea reed
- 1910, Walter John Buck, Abel Chapman, Unexplored Spain[1]:
- Rather would we compare these marram-tufted, wind-sculptured sand-wastes with the Red Sea litoral and the Egyptian Soudan, where Osman Digna led British troops memorable dances in the ‘nineties—alike both in their physical aspect and in their climate, red-hot by day, yet apt to be deadly chilly after sundown.
- 1919, F. St. Mars, The Way of the Wild[2]:
- He circled rapidly, stopped, swerved, and, at the canter, took up another scent. Suddenly, in a tussock of marram, his nose and he stopped dead.
Translations
Ammophila arenaria
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Further reading
- Ammophila (plant) on Wikipedia.Wikipedia
- Ammophila on Wikispecies.Wikispecies
Etymology 2
Noun
marram (uncountable)
- Alternative form of murram.
Galician
Verb
marram
- (reintegrationist norm) third-person plural present indicative of marrar
Latin
Noun
marram
- accusative singular of marra
Woiwurrung
Noun
marram
Alternative forms
- mirrm[1]
See also
- mirrm-bootor (“kangaroos (two)”)
- mirrm-boolok (“kangaroos (many)”)
Noun
marram
Alternative forms
References
- Aunty Joy Murphy, Andrew Kelly (2019) Wilam, A Birrarung Story, page 27
- ↑ 1.0 1.1 https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/2/27/The_aborigines_of_Victoria_-_with_notes_relating_to_the_habits_of_the_natives_of_other_parts_of_Australia_and_Tasmania_%28IA_b24885228_0002%29.pdf
- ^ https://deadlystory.com/page/aboriginal-country-map/Aboriginal_Country_Completed/Wurundjeri/Wurundjeri_Language