/ˈmarʃi/
OriginBorrowed from French marcher, from Frankish *markōn (“to mark out, press with the foot”), from Proto-Germanic *markōną (“area, region, edge, border”). Compare German marschieren, Polish maszerować, Russian марширова́ть (marširovátʹ), Italian marciare, English march.
- intransitiveto march
- intransitiveto walk
Formsmarŝas(present) · marŝis(past) · marŝos(future) · marŝus(conditional) · marŝu(volitive) · marŝanta(active, participle, present, singular) · marŝantaj(active, participle, plural, present) · marŝinta(active, participle, past, singular) · marŝintaj(active, participle, past, plural) · marŝonta(active, future, participle, singular) · marŝontaj(active, future, participle, plural) · marŝantan(accusative, active, participle, present, singular) · marŝantajn(accusative, active, participle, plural, present) · marŝintan(accusative, active, participle, past, singular) · marŝintajn(accusative, active, participle, past, plural) · marŝontan(accusative, active, future, participle, singular) · marŝontajn(accusative, active, future, participle, plural) · marŝanto(active, noun-from-verb, participle, present, singular) · marŝantoj(active, noun-from-verb, participle, plural, present) · marŝinto(active, noun-from-verb, participle, past, singular)