martsa
Cebuano
noun
Definitions
- a march
Etymology
Borrowed from Spanish, Castilian marcha derived from French marcher (walk, march, work) derived from Old French marchier (trample, stride, march) derived from Frankish *markōn (press with the foot, mark, mark out) derived from Proto-Indo-European *merg- (be dark, flicker, dim).
Origin
Proto-Indo-European
*merg-
Gloss
be dark, flicker, dim
Timeline
Distribution of cognates by language
Geogrpahic distribution of cognates
Cognates and derived terms
- march English
- marcha Latin
- marginem Latin
- marschieren German
- marcher French
- marcheur French
- remarcher French
- маршировать Russian
- marcha Spanish, Castilian
- marchar Spanish, Castilian
- marchoso Spanish, Castilian
- *merg- Proto-Indo-European
- marsjere Norwegian Bokmål
- marchar Portuguese
- *markō Proto-Germanic
- *markōną Proto-Germanic
- marchere Danish
- *morkъ Proto-Slavic
- marchier Old French
- marchis Old French
- marŝi Esperanto
- marxar Catalan, Valencian
- marchar Galician
- marchi Norman
- marchier Norman
- marcher Middle French
- marchar Occitan
- *markōn Frankish
- marché Louisiana Creole French
- marchiér Franco-Provençal