English Dictionary
◊ MARCH
March
n 1: the month following February and preceding April [syn: {March},
{Mar}]
2: the 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" [syn: {marching}]
3: music written for marching; "Sousa wrote the best marches"
[syn: {marching music}]
4: a steady advance; "the march of science"; "the march of
time"
5: a procession of people walking together; "the march went up
Fifth Avenue"
6: a degree granted for the successful completion of advanced
study of architecture [syn: {Master of Architecture}, {MArch}]
v 1: march in a procession; "They processed into the dining room"
[syn: {process}]
2: force to march; "The Japanese marched their prisoners
through Manchuria"
3: walk fast, with regular or measured steps; walk with a
stride; "He strode confidently across the hall" [syn: {stride}]
4: march in protest; take part in a demonstration [syn: {demonstrate}]
5: walk ostentatiously; "She parades her new husband around
town" [syn: {parade}, {exhibit}]
6: cause to march or go at a marching pace; "They marched the
mules into the desert"
English Computing Dictionary
◊ DID YOU MEAN LARCH?
Larch
The Larch Project develops aids for formal specifications.
Each Larch specification has two components: an interface
containing predicates written in the LIL ({Larch Interface
Language}) designed for the target language and a 'trait'
containing assertions about the {predicate}s written in LSL,
the {Larch Shared Language} common to all.
["The Larch Family of Specification Languages", J. Guttag et
al, IEEE Trans Soft Eng 2(5):24-365 (Sep 1985)].