0 past simple and past participle of march
1 to walk somewhere quickly and in a determined way, often because you are angry:
2 to forcefully make someone go somewhere by taking hold of that person and pulling them there or going there together:
He started to march away, and the others fell in behind him.
Soldiers were marching into the city.
Within minutes, seven men, several dressed in suits and ties, marched in, one by one, and stood in a row behind us.
We didn't have books of arrangements written out for us to read as we marched.
If it had some followers in the village, they marched to the main square to claim their right to hold elections on the main square.