| 1. | to walk with regular and measured tread, as soldiers on parade; advance in step in an organized body. |
| 2. | to walk in a stately, deliberate manner. |
| 3. | to go forward; advance; proceed: Time marches on. |
| 4. | to cause to march. |
| 5. | the act or course of marching. |
| 6. | the distance covered in a single period of marching. |
| 7. | advance; progress; forward movement: the march of science. |
| 8. | a piece of music with a rhythm suited to accompany marching. |
| 9. | march on, to march toward, as in protest or in preparation for confrontation or battle: The angry mob marched on the Bastille. |
| 10. | on the march, moving ahead; progressing; advancing: Automation is on the march. |
| 11. | steal a march on, to gain an advantage over, esp. secretly or slyly. |

| 1. | Francis Andrew, 1825–1911, U.S. philologist and lexicographer. |
| 2. | Fredric (Frederick McIntyre Bickel ), 1897–1975, U.S. actor. |
| 3. | Pey⋅ton Con⋅way [peyt-n kon-wey] , 1864–1955, U.S. army officer (son of Francis Andrew March). |
| 4. | German name of the Morava. |
| Marchioness. |
| Master of Architecture. |
| 1. | German, March. a river in central Europe, flowing S from NE Czech Republic, along part of the border between the Czech Republic and Slovakia, and Slovakia and Austria, into the Danube W of Bratislava. 240 mi. (385 km) long. |
| 2. | a river in E Yugoslavia, flowing N to the Danube. 134 mi. (216 km) long. |
| 3. | Czech name of Moravia. |
March (märch) n. Abbr. Mar. The third month of the year in the Gregorian calendar. See Table at calendar. [Middle English, from Anglo-Norman, from Latin Mārtius (mēnsis), (month) of Mars, from Mārs, Mārt-, Mars.] |
March
third month of the Gregorian calendar. It was named after Mars, the Roman god of war. Originally, March was the first month of the Roman calendar.
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