- the 3rd month of the year, between February and April
- She was born in March.
- (British English) The meeting is on the fifth of March/March the fifth.
- (North American English) The meeting is on March fifth.
- We went to Japan last March.
- I arrived at the end of March.
- Whale-watching trips begin in early March.
- The seeds germinate from March to May.
- The study appears in the March issue of the Journal of Paediatrics.
Extra ExamplesTopics Timea1- The event will be held from March 3rd to 9th.
- Elections were held in late March.
- He revealed his secret in a March 2019 interview.
Word OriginMiddle English: from an Old French dialect variant of marz, from Latin Martius (mensis) ‘(month) of Mars’.Want to learn more?
Find out which words work together and produce more natural sounding English with the Oxford Collocations Dictionary app.
Idioms
See March in the Oxford Advanced American Dictionary(as) mad as a hatter/a March hare
- (informal) (of a person) with crazy ideas or behaviour; very silly
- He's as mad as a March hare but he does a great job.
More Like This Similes in idiomsSimiles in idioms- (as) bald as a coot
- (as) blind as a bat
- (as) bright as a button
- (as) bold as brass
- as busy as a bee
- as clean as a whistle
- (as) dead as a/the dodo
- (as) deaf as a post
- (as) dull as ditchwater
- (as) fit as a fiddle
- as flat as a pancake
- (as) good as gold
- (as) mad as a hatter/a March hare
- (as) miserable/ugly as sin
- as old as the hills
- (as) pleased/proud as Punch
- as pretty as a picture
- (as) regular as clockwork
- (as) quick as a flash
- (as) safe as houses
- (as) sound as a bell
- (as) steady as a rock
- (as) thick as two short planks
- (as) tough as old boots
Check pronunciation:
March