marish


Also found in: Wikipedia.

marish

(ˈmærɪʃ)
adj
(Physical Geography) obsolete marshy; swampy
[C14: from Old French marais marsh]
Collins English Dictionary – Complete and Unabridged, 12th Edition 2014 © HarperCollins Publishers 1991, 1994, 1998, 2000, 2003, 2006, 2007, 2009, 2011, 2014
Mentioned in ?
References in classic literature ?
It hath been a great endangering to the health of some plantations, that they have built along the sea and rivers, in marish and unwholesome grounds.
So spake our Mother EVE, and ADAM heard VVell pleas'd, but answer'd not; for now too nigh Th' Archangel stood, and from the other Hill To thir fixt Station, all in bright array The Cherubim descended; on the ground Gliding meteorous, as Ev'ning Mist Ris'n from a River o're the marish glides, And gathers ground fast at the Labourers heel Homeward returning.
MONDAY A Woman Captured: Storyville BBC4, 10pm Marish, a 53-year-old Hungarian woman, has been kept as an unpaid domestic slave for 10 years by a family in her native country.
Early mark when tepid gleams Oft mingle with the pearls of summer showers, And swell too hastily the tender plains: Then snatch away thy sheep; beware the rot; And with detersive bay-salt rub their mouths: Or urge them on a barren bank to feed, In hunger's kind distress, on tedded hay; Or to the marish guide their easy steps, If near thy tufted crofts the broad sea spreads.
The detainees were identified as Mona al-Saeh, Husam Bastami, Abdullah al-Aker, Ziad Marish, Saed Khudariya, Amjad Abu Ghoush, Nidal Abu Rmaila, Said Dwaikat, Wajih Abu Idah, Omar Atallah, Omar Abdul-Wahhab, Ahmad Sawalha, Amin Abu Warda, who works as a reporter, Samih Ilaiwi, Anan Fattouh, Sami al-Asi, Amjad Zamel, Jaser Abo Hamada, Basem Abu Gnaid, Fares and Ghanem Sawalma, Ghassan Khaled, Ghassan and Abu Hamza al-Jurf, Bara Abbas and Sami al-Asi.
I can buy a generator to solve the problem of electricity but it will be difficult to overcome the fuel problem," said Mohammed Marish, a 34-year-old pharmacist.
The mournful melancholy of the owner of an empty flask of French claret ("My heart sunk with our claret flask, / Just now, beneath the heavy sedges / That serve this pond's black face for mask") (15) is humorously reminiscent of Tennyson's "Mariana," in which "cluster'd marish mosses crept" over "blackenen'd waters" (11.
WAFA reports of several more searches in private homes in Marish, a village located to the south of Dura, Wadi Al-Hariya and Yax[c]bad, located to the southwest of Jenin.
Nagel identifies two groups of Hobbit place-names, a "Hobbiton-cum-By-water perspective" (31) and a "Celtic substratum" (30) centered about Buckand and the Marish. The etymology of 'The Shire' has its own sub-section, which leads on to "A Few Choice Hobbit Names," in which Nagel looks at a small selection of Hobbit personal names: Baggins, Bilbo, Frodo, Brandybuck, Meriadoc, Gamwich, Samwise, Hamfast, and Took.
We were average young men growing up in Parish Land where the marish and the parish lived and died.
In pare it is your 'Marish ny Fiddleryn.' But whereas yours is a matter of 16 lines, and obviously, I think, a fragment, this extends to 52 lines, and seems complete.