Nouns

(n)march, marchingthe act of marching; walking with regular steps (especially in a procession of some kind)“it was a long march”, “we heard the sound of marching”
(n)marcha steady advance“the march of science”, “the march of time”
(n)marcha procession of people walking together“the march went up Fifth Avenue”
(n)borderland, border district, march, marchlanddistrict consisting of the area on either side of a border or boundary of a country or an area“the Welsh marches between England and Wales”
(n)marching music, marchgenre of music written for marching“Sousa wrote the best marches”

Verbs

(v)march, process2march in a procession“They processed into the dining room”
(v)marchforce to march“The Japanese marched their prisoners through Manchuria”
(v)marchwalk fast, with regular or measured steps; walk with a stride“He marched into the classroom and announced the exam”, “The soldiers marched across the border”
(v)demonstrate, marchmarch in protest; take part in a demonstration“Thousands demonstrated against globalization during the meeting of the most powerful economic nations in Seattle”
(v)parade, exhibit, marchwalk ostentatiously“She parades her new husband around town”
(v)marchcause to march or go at a marching pace“They marched the mules into the desert”
(v)border, adjoin, edge, abut, march, butt, butt against, butt onlie adjacent to another or share a boundary“Canada adjoins the U.S.”, “England marches with Scotland”