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- Dictionarymarch/mɑːtʃ/
verb
- 1. walk in a military manner with a regular measured tread: "thousands marched behind the coffin" Similar
noun
- 1. an act or instance of marching: "the relieving force was more than a day's march away" Similar
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an event in which a large number of people walk through a public place to express their support for something, or their disagreement with or disapproval of something: She's going on a march on Saturday in protest over the closure of the hospital. PeopleImages/E+/GettyImages. Fewer examples.
The meaning of MARCH is a border region : frontier; especially : a district originally set up to defend a boundary —usually used in plural. How to use march in a sentence.
noun. the act or course of marching. the distance covered in a single period of marching: The edge of the desert is three days' march away. forward movement; advance; progress: The unrestrained march of science and technology may have some alarming social consequences. a piece of music with a rhythm suited to accompany marching.
To march is to walk with deliberate, short steps that fall in a regular rhythm. You can take your time walking into school in the morning, or you can march right up the steps and through the door.
MARCH meaning: 1. an event in which a large number of people walk through a public place to express their support…. Learn more.
A march is the action, by a group of soldiers, of walking somewhere with very regular steps, as a group.
1. a. To walk steadily and rhythmically forward in step with others. b. To begin to move in such a manner: The troops will march at dawn. 2. a. To proceed directly and purposefully: marched in and demanded to see the manager. b. To progress steadily onward; advance: Time marches on. 3. To participate in an organized walk, as for a public cause.