marche
IPA: mˈɑrʃ
Root Word: Marche
noun
- An administrative region in central Italy.
- Obsolete spelling of March [The third month of the Gregorian calendar, following February and preceding April. Abbreviation: Mar or Mar.]
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Examples of "marche" in Sentences
- Une grande roue en Inde qui ne marche pas à l'aide d'un moteur mais à l'aide de la force humaine.
- He has qualities of the mind that put him above the reach of these misfortunes; and if reduced, as perhaps he may, to the 'marche' of
- Among the runners-up this year: the supermarket company Carrefour which changed the name of its Champion chain of stores to Carrefour Market, as in not the French word "marche".
- I said just now "this dance," but, strictly speaking, the polonaise, which has been called a marche dansante, is not so much a dance as a figured walk, or procession, full of gravity and a certain courtly etiquette.
- Sculpture at auction did well in 2010, led by Alberto Giacometti's "L'homme qui marche I" 1960, a bronze figure of a lonely man walking, which last February at Sotheby's London, fetched a record £ 65 million for sculpture.
- So in between the relentless sun that beats here in season and the saving of baby seals, she is mercilessly weathered, so it's better to see her in the exhibition than in the marche, the outdoor market where she comes to shop.
- Prix-fixe menus €33 vegetarian, €38 and €48; average à la carte €60Ever since Chicago-born chef Daniel Rose moved from the 9th arrondissement to a renovated 17th-century house in Les Halles in July 2010, he's been playing to a packed house with his inventive cuisine du marche menu.
- Et ne meme pas mentioner le fait que depuis cinq siecles l 'afrique a servi de marche pied a la revolution industriele occidentale, de l'esclavage a nos jours, quand il n'a pas hesite a remonter jusqu'au moyen-age pour rendre hommage a la contribution des arabes a la civilisation mondiale?!
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