Search results
- 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
Powered by Oxford Dictionaries
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.
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.
1. to walk with regular, steady steps of equal length, usually in a group or military formation. 2. to walk in a grave, stately way. 3. to advance or progress steadily. verb transitive. 4. to cause (troops, etc.) to march.
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.
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 to protest about oil drilling in the area. PeopleImages/E+/GettyImages.
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.
Definition of march noun in Oxford Advanced Learner's Dictionary. Meaning, pronunciation, picture, example sentences, grammar, usage notes, synonyms and more.
Master the word "MARCH" in English: definitions, translations, synonyms, pronunciations, examples, and grammar insights - all in one complete resource.
MARCH definition: 1. an organized walk by a group to show that they disagree with something: 2. the special type of…. Learn more.
Mar 1, 2019 · 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.