MARCH


Meaning of MARCH in English

I. ˈmärch, ˈmȧch noun

( -es )

Usage: usually capitalized

Etymology: Middle English, from Old French march, marz, from Latin martius, from martius of Mars, from Mart-, Mars, Roman god of war and agriculture

: the third month of the Gregorian calendar — abbr. Mar. ; see month table

II. noun

( -es )

Etymology: Middle English marche, from Old French, of Germanic origin; akin to Old High German marha boundary — more at mark

1.

a.

(1) : a border region : borderland , frontier

(2) : boundary

b. : territory ; especially : the territory (as a province) of an official's jurisdiction

2. usually capitalized : march king of arms

III. intransitive verb

( -ed/-ing/-es )

Etymology: Middle English marchen, from Middle French marchir, from Old French, from marche, n.

: to have a contiguous location : have common borders or frontiers : lie continuously parallel or adjacent

a region that marches with Canada on the north and the Pacific on the west

: lie extended

mountain ranges that march along the horizon on every side — American Guide Series: Vermont

IV. “, as a command in drilling often ˈhärch or ˈhȧch verb

( -ed/-ing/-es )

Etymology: Middle French marcher, marchier to march, trample under foot, from Old French marchier to trample under foot, probably of Germanic origin; akin to Old English mearcian to mark, determine the boundaries of, Old High German marcōn to determine the boundaries of — more at mark

intransitive verb

1.

a.

(1) : to move along steadily with a regular measured stride ; especially : to move along steadily with a rhythmic stride and in step with one or more others so moving

enviously watched the column of soldiers marching smartly up the street

(2) : to begin to move along steadily in this manner : begin such movement : set out or start marching

said his troops would march at the crack of dawn

b. : to be in accord : move along in harmonious agreement : jibe

wherever his sympathies marched with the facts — Walter Lippmann

2.

a.

(1) : to move from one point to another usually by walking especially in a direct purposeful manner and without delaying

heard a noise upstairs and marched up to see what was going on

(2) : to go along : proceed , travel

can march off to distant times and places — Newsweek

hundreds of ships which had marched into the gulf — K.M.Dodson

b. : to make steady progress : move right along : go forward : move ahead : advance

engines that march down the assembly line each day — A.H.Raskin

forces that march inexorably toward greater social justice

3. obsolete : to have status : have rating : rank

march in the first rank of magnificence — Robert Johnson

transitive verb

1.

a. : to cause to march

marched a division of foot troops forty honest miles in a day — H.H.Arnold & I.C.Eaker

discipline that could march men past the point of exhaustion — Bruce Catton

b. : to bring or conduct somewhere especially in a peremptory or unceremonious way or by force

can remember him marching us all off from the schoolhouse — A.E.Coppard

marched them promptly to the jailhouse

2. : to cover (an indicated distance or area) by marching : traverse

marched the ten remaining miles in record time

V. noun

( -es )

Etymology: Middle French marche, from marcher, marchier, v.

1.

a.

(1) : the action of marching

were too tired to begin another march

(2) : the distance covered within a specific period of time by marching

the city was at least a day's march away

(3) : a regular measured stride or rhythmic step used in marching

heard the march of the soldiers as they filed past

b.

(1) : forward movement : steady advance : progress

the march of time and events

the march of science

especially : forward movement of a marching unit especially a military unit

could not check the march of troops into their country

(2) : direction of movement : course

did not like the current march of public opinion

c. : a long usually tiring journey usually on foot

were not happy at the thought of a march to the top of the mountain

2. : an instrumental or vocal composition that is in duple rhythm (as 4/4 time) or triply compound rhythm (as 6/8 time) with a strongly accentuated beat and that is designed or suitable for the accompaniment and guidance of marching

3. : the taking of all five tricks by one side in the game of euchre

- on the march

- steal a march on

VI. abbreviation

Usage: often capitalized

marchioness

Webster's New International English Dictionary.      Новый международный словарь английского языка Webster.