slow-march
See also: slow march
English
editVerb
editslow-march (third-person singular simple present slow-marches, present participle slow-marching, simple past and past participle slow-marched)
- To perform a slow march.
- 1960 June, M.G.D. Farr, “Railbus services in the Western Region”, in Trains Illustrated, page 366:
- Half-an-hour later the whistle blew to summon the passengers back to the train, and they then moved on to Tetbury, where a procession was formed and slow-marched into the centre of the town, led by two top-hatted "mourners".