Marchy

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English

Etymology

From March +‎ -y.

Adjective

Marchy (comparative more Marchy, superlative most Marchy)

  1. (rare) Characteristic of the month of March.
    • 1926 February 17, Frederick P. Latimer, “To Our Absent Friends”, in The New London Evening Day, New London, Conn., page six, column 4:
      Not now, but soon, and in a very few weeks, the Marchy winds already blowing, Mr. Eldredge of Mystic will be putting fatherlily his matchless peas in the frost-rid ground—after smoothing over the old ground-mole holes—and our friends in far, fair Florida, may safely move them to return.