march / mɑrtʃ /

💦中学词汇进行曲行进前进行军

march3 个定义

v. 无主动词 verb
  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.
v. 有主动词 verb
  1. to cause to march.
n. 名词 noun
  1. the act or course of marching.
  2. the distance covered in a single period of marching.
  3. advance; progress; forward movement: the march of science.
  4. a piece of music with a rhythm suited to accompany marching.

march 近义词

v. 动词 verb

walk with deliberation

march构成的短语

  • marching orders, get one's
  • march to a different beat
  • steal a march on

更多march例句

  1. Then its Work from Home Challenge was created once the pandemic took effect in March.
  2. Blake’s father will speak at Sharpton’s March on Washington commemoration on Friday, Noerdlinger said.
  3. Just last week we were cheering a weekly jobless claims number that came in below 1 million for the first time since March.
  4. Then came the big selloff that sank the S&P by around 35% in March.
  5. By Jeanniey Walden, Chief Innovation & Marketing Officer, DailyPay In March, everything changed in an instant.
  6. I was pregnant, uncomfortably so, for the first time and with twins, due the following March.
  7. Last March they gave Airbus a huge piece of new business, ordering 169 A320s and 65 of the slightly larger A321.
  8. Her focus would be on the three months, January through March 1965, that gave birth to the Voting Rights Act.
  9. The NYPD Emerald Society pipes and drums struck up a slow march and the procession began the journey to the cemetery.
  10. In March, police arrested a group of wealthy businessmen and government officials who were about to dine on illegal tiger meat.
  11. In less than ten minutes, the bivouac was broken up, and our little army on the march.
  12. Nothing remarkable occurred in our march through this country.
  13. Genoa has but recently and partially felt the new impulse, yet even here the march of improvement is visible.
  14. Then with your victorious legions you can march south and help drive the Yankee invaders from the land.
  15. While they were doing this, he assembled the officers around him, and the meaning of our night march was explained to us.
扩展阅读 march

What happens in March?

March is the third month of the year. It follows February and is followed by April. It has 31 days.

March is notable because it is one of the two times a year when an equinox occurs. Around March 20–21, the vernal equinox marks the beginning of spring in the Northern Hemisphere and the autumnal equinox marks the beginning of fall in the Southern Hemisphere.

In places where spring begins in March, the proverb March comes in like a lion and goes out like a lamb is used to refer to the fact that the month often begins with harsh winter weather that eventually gives way to mild spring weather.

In the U.S., March also includes the day on which people in many places adjust their clocks for daylight-saving time by setting them an hour later.

March is Women’s History Month and March 8 is International Women’s Day. In the U.S., St. Patrick’s Day is celebrated on March 17.

The U.S. college basketball tournament known as March Madness starts in March.

The word march is also a common word meaning “to walk in a military formation” or “to walk in a purposeful way.” It’s not related to the name of the month.

Example: We had a blizzard last week and now people are walking around in shorts—that’s March weather for you.