March
English
Etymology
From Middle English March, Marche, borrowed from Anglo-Norman marche, from Old French marz, from Latin mensis Mārtius (“the Martian month”), from earlier Mavors.
Pronunciation
Proper noun
March (usually uncountable, plural Marches)
- The third month of the Gregorian calendar, following February and preceding April. Abbreviation: Mar or Mar.
- A surname from Middle English for someone born in March, or for someone living near a boundary (marche).
- (uncommon) A male given name from English.
- 2001, John Dunning, Two O'Clock, Eastern Wartime: A Novel, →ISBN, page 82:
- “Kendall told me about a man named March Flack. A radio actor who disappeared years ago. I assumed that was here.”
- 2012, Travis Glasson, Mastering Christianity: Missionary Anglicanism and Slavery, →ISBN:
- Alexander Garden Jr., the long-serving rector of South Carolina's St. Thomas parish, twice advertised in 1747 to offer a reward for the return of an enslaved Igbo man named March, who had run away from the parsonage house.
- 2013, Dea H. Boster, African American Slavery and Disability: Bodies, Property and Power, →ISBN:
- However, Patty seems to have been the only one of more than seventy slaves at Ossabaw Island who did not perform some duty on the plantation, which is evidence that elderly and disabled slaves were indeed put to work despite their impairments. The overseer's journals for Kollock's Ossabaw Island plantation allow us to trace the career of one disabled slave, a blind man named March, to demonstrate the utility of slaves with debilities. At the time Kollack was consolidating his assets on his new plantation, March was rated to be a "quarter hand," with no indication of what jobs he was expected to perform at that time. In the 1850 and 1851 journals, March is not included in tallies of cotton pickings by weight, unlike most other male slaves [...]
- 2016, Mary V. T. Cattan, Pilgrimage of Awakening: The Extraordinary Lives of Murray and Mary Rogers, →ISBN, page 157:
- What suited her much better was a young man named March whom she had met at a friend's wedding in London. Both Linda and March Hancock had grown up far east of Eden, [...] March Hancock was born in 1944 [...]
- A market town and civil parish with a town council in Fenland district, Cambridgeshire, England (OS grid ref TL4196). [1]
- A municipality near Freiburg im Breisgau, Baden-Württemberg, Germany.
- An unincorporated community in Marshall County, Minnesota, United States.
- An unincorporated community in Dallas County, Missouri, United States, named after the month.
Hyponyms
Related terms
- a bushel of March dust is worth a king's ransom
- ides of March
- March Air Reserve Base
- March ale
- March beer
- March break
- March brown
- March chick
- March comes in like a lion and goes out like a lamb
- March crane fly
- March equinox
- March fly
- March hare
- March-mad
- March Madness
- March moth
- March Revolution
- March violet
Related terms
Descendants
Translations
third month of the Gregorian calendar
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See also
References
Anagrams
Middle English
Etymology
From Anglo-Norman marche, from Old French mars. See English March for more.
Proper noun
March
- March
- 14th c. Geoffrey Chaucer, The Canterbury Tales. General Prologue: 1-2.
- Whan that Aprill, with his shoures soote
the droghte of March hath perced to the roote- (please add an English translation of this quotation)
- Synonym: Lyde (rare)
- 14th c. Geoffrey Chaucer, The Canterbury Tales. General Prologue: 1-2.
References
- “march(e, n.”, in MED Online, Ann Arbor, Mich.: University of Michigan, 2007.
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