marine - Wiktionary, the free dictionary (original) (raw)
From Wiktionary, the free dictionary
Recorded since c.1420 as Middle English marin, borrowed from Middle French marin, from Old French, from Latin marinus (“of the sea”), itself from mare (“sea”), from Proto-Indo-European *móri (“body of water, lake”) (cognate with Old English mere (“sea, lake, pool, pond”), Dutch meer, German Meer, all from Proto-Germanic *mari). The modern pronunciation is presumably due to the influence of modern French marine, feminine singular of marin.
marine (comparative more marine, superlative most marine)
- Belonging to or characteristic of the sea; existing or found in the sea; formed or produced by the sea.
- 2013 July 20, “Welcome to the plastisphere”, in The Economist, volume 408, number 8845:
Plastics are energy-rich substances, which is why many of them burn so readily. Any organism that could unlock and use that energy would do well in the Anthropocene. Terrestrial bacteria and fungi which can manage this trick are already familiar to experts in the field. Dr Mincer and Dr Amaral-Zettler found evidence of them on their marine plastic, too.
- 2013 July 20, “Welcome to the plastisphere”, in The Economist, volume 408, number 8845:
- Relating to or connected with the sea (in operation, scope, etc.), especially as pertains to shipping, a navy, or naval forces.
- Used or adapted for use at sea.
- (zoology) Inhabiting the high seas; oceanic; pelagic. (distinguished from maritime or littoral)
- (obsolete) Belonging to or situated at the seaside; maritime.
- Of or concerning underwater conditions, either saltwater or freshwater ones, and the equipment used therein.
This grease is suitable for marine use.
of or pertaining to the sea
- Albanian: ujor (sq)
- Arabic: بَحْرِيّ (baḥriyy)
- Armenian: ծովային (hy) (covayin)
- Asturian: marín (ast)
- Belarusian: марскі́ (marskí)
- Bhojpuri: समुंद्री (samundrī)
- Bulgarian: мо́рски (bg) (mórski)
- Catalan: marí (ca)
- Chinese:
Mandarin: 海的 (hǎi de), 海洋的 (hǎiyáng de), 海事的 (hǎishì de), 海產的 / 海产的 (hǎichǎn de), 海運的 / 海运的 (hǎiyùn de), 航海的 (hánghǎi de) - Chukchi: аӈӄакэн (aṇqakėn)
- Czech: mořský (cs)
- Danish: marin (da), maritim
- Dutch: marien (nl), maritiem (nl)
- Estonian: please add this translation if you can
- Finnish: merellinen (fi), meri- (fi)
- French: marin (fr), maritime (fr)
- Galician: mariño (gl)
- Georgian: საზღვაო (sazɣvao)
- German: See- (de), Meeres- (de)
- Greek: θαλάσσιος (el) (thalássios), ναυτικός (el) (naftikós)
Ancient Greek: θαλάσσιος (thalássios), ἅλιος (hálios) - Hebrew: יַמִּי (he) (yamí)
- Hindi: मैरीन (hi) (mairīn)
- Hungarian: tengeri (hu)
- Icelandic: sjávar- (is)
- Indonesian: bahari (id)
- Italian: marino (it), marittimo (it)
- Japanese: 海の (ja) (うみの, umi no)
- Korean: 바다의 (ko) (bada-ui)
- Latin: maritimus, marīnus
- Latvian: please add this translation if you can
- Lithuanian: please add this translation if you can
- Macedonian: мо́рски (mórski)
- Malay: laut (ms), kelautan, bahari (ms), marin
- Middle English: see (noun used attributively)
- Norwegian:
Bokmål: marin
Nynorsk: marin - Occitan: marin (oc)
- Old English: sǣn
- Persian: آبزی (fa) (âb-zi), بحری (fa) (bahri)
- Polish: morski (pl)
- Portuguese: marítimo (pt) m, marinho (pt) m
- Romanian: marin (ro), maritim (ro)
- Russian: морско́й (ru) (morskój)
- Serbo-Croatian:
Cyrillic: мо̀рскӣ
Latin: mòrskī (sh) - Slovak: morský (sk)
- Slovene: morski (sl)
- Spanish: marítimo (es), marino (es)
- Swedish: marin (sv), sjö- (sv)
- Tagalog: karagatnin
- Tajik: баҳрӣ (tg) (bahri)
- Thai: ทะเล (th) (tá-lee)
- Turkish: bahri (tr)
- Ukrainian: морськи́й (morsʹkýj)
marine (plural marines)
- (military, nautical) A soldier, normally a member of a marine corps, trained to serve on board or from a ship.
He was a marine in World War II. - (capitalised in the plural): A marine corps.
He fought with the Marines in World War II. - A painting representing some marine subject.
- (archaic) Any fleet of ships (commercial, military, or both).
Synonym: (archaic) navy
Royal Marine (countable noun), Royal Marines (proper noun)
member of a marine corps
- Apache:
Western Apache: tú silááda - Bulgarian: мо́рски пехоти́нец m (mórski pehotínec)
- Chinese:
Mandarin: 水兵 (zh) (shuǐbīng) - Czech: mariňák m
- Danish: marinesoldat c, mariner c
- Dutch: marinier (nl) m
- Finnish: merijalkaväen sotilas, rannikkojääkäri (fi)
- French: marinier (fr) m
- Galician: marine m
- German: Marineinfanterist (de) m
- Greek: πεζοναύτης (el) m (pezonáftis)
- Hebrew: חַיַּל צִי (he) m (khayál tsi), נַחָת (he) m (nakhát)
- Hindi: मैरीन (hi) m (mairīn)
- Hungarian: tengerészgyalogos (hu)
- Ido: navaro (io)
- Indonesian: marinir (id)
- Japanese: 水兵 (ja) (すいへい, suihei)
- Korean: 수병(水兵) (ko) (subyeong)
- Navajo: akał bikʼos
- Polish: żołnierz piechoty morskiej m pers
- Portuguese: fuzileiro naval m
- Russian: солда́т морско́й пехо́ты m (soldát morskój pexóty), морско́й пехоти́нец m (morskój pexotínec), морпе́х (ru) m (morpéx)
- Spanish: infante de marina (es) m, marino (es) m, alier (es) m (desus.), marine (es) m or f, managuá m (colloquial), marinero (es) m
- Swedish: marinsoldat (sv) c
- Ukrainian: морськи́й піхоти́нець m (morsʹkýj pixotýnecʹ), морпі́х (uk) m (morpíx)
marine (third-person singular simple present marines, present participle marining, simple past and past participle marined)
- To adapt for use in a marine environment.
- 1938, Pacific Motor Boat - Volume 31, page 54:
The most popular model is the Chrysler 75 marined motor. This motor comes fully marined and fully reconditioned at $ 225 at Oakland. - 1956, Fishing Gazette - Volume 73, page 94:
Frank Kennedy Sr. and Jr. watch mechanic make an adjustment on one of the two Minneapolis-Moline industrial diesel engines being marined by Kennedy-Morris Co., Biloxi, Miss. - 1959, SAE Technical Paper Series, page 70:
Marine engines, until 1949, included many truck engine blocks marined up. - 1964, “New I-H Diesel Adds Two Knots to Dragger's Speed”, in Western Fisheries, volume 68, page 101:
First was in Jimmy Pope's “Willow Point,” and both units were marined in Vancouver by Nolan Lowe, in his plant at 1925 W. Georgia St., Vancouver. - 2010, S. S. Dara, S. D. Shete, S. Chand’s Applied Chemistry Volume - 2, page 31:
This type of protection is of particular value in case of buried structures such as tanks and pipelines, transmission line towers, marined piers, laid-up ships etc.
- 1938, Pacific Motor Boat - Volume 31, page 54:
- To temporarily inundate with water and/or other marine substances.
- 1893, Edgar Saltus, Madam Sapphira: A Fifth Avenue Story, page 97:
"And Baptiste? It is there he is. The trunks of Monsieru to the number 12, and let it not loiter. And hey!" she cried with much haughtiness to an interloper who had opened the cab-door and was now officious in the transfer of the luggage, “ And hey, species of calf's head marined in mud, go, I pray you, a little that way and see if I there am." - 1937, Amadeus William Grabau, Palæozoic Formations in the Light of the Pulsation Theory, page 271:
As will be seen from this very sparing representation of indeterminable brachiopods etc. , this fauna can hardly be regarded as indicating marine submergence, for the shells of these organisms could just as readily have been swept in with the graptolites during the periods of marining. - 2006, Robin Becker, “Rain”, in Domain of Perfect Affection:
I decided to love its drenching monopolies for it was like this: cartels of imported rain marined the yard with brackish-water jellies.
- 1893, Edgar Saltus, Madam Sapphira: A Fifth Avenue Story, page 97:
- To equip (a boat) with sailors and other personnel required for an ocean voyage.
- 1863, William Kirby, William Spence, An Introduction to Entomology, page 569:
And now, having marined this Royal Harry with as large a complement of men as I could muster, shall launch her. - 1903, Captain Marryat, Rattlin, the Reefer, page 188:
Just as we had got the ship's head towards the stranger , with every stitch of canvas crowded upon her , and the eight-oared cutter, manned, armed, and marined, towing astern, they had got the captured West Indiaman before the wind, with everything set. - 1913, Lumber World Review - Volume 24, page 33:
The American coastwise laws provide that only American vessels , marined by American sailors at from 40to40 to 40to160 per month, can engage in the coastwise trade between states
- 1863, William Kirby, William Spence, An Introduction to Entomology, page 569:
- William Dwight Whitney and Benjamin E[li] Smith, editors (1914), “marine”, in The Century Dictionary: An Encyclopedic Lexicon of the English Language, revised edition, volumes III (Hoop–O), New York, N.Y.: The Century Co., →OCLC, page 3630.
- James A. H. Murray et al., editors (1884–1928), “Marine”, in A New English Dictionary on Historical Principles (Oxford English Dictionary), volume VI, Part 2 (M–N), London: Clarendon Press, →OCLC, pages 163–4.
- Merina, Armine, Marien, remain, Mainer, Mirena, mainer, Reiman, Rieman, airmen, Minear, Amrein, Amrine, mirena, Marnie
From French marine, from Latin marinus.
marine
marine c (singular definite marinen, plural indefinite mariner)
- a navy
Synonyms: flåde, orlogsflåde, søværn - navy (colour)
- (art) painting with motifs related to the sea
Synonym: marinebillede
From French marine, from Latin marinus, derived from mare (“sea”).
marine f (plural marines, diminutive marinetje n)
- (navigation) a navy
- (military) an armed navy (naval branch of armed forces)
- (military) zeemacht
- marineblauw
- marine-infanterie
- marineschip
- marinier
- manier
From marin, from Latin marīnus, derived from mare (“sea”).
marine
marine f (plural marines)
- marine de guerre
- marine marchande
- marine militaire
- marinette f colloquial form of a feminine marin_: though not derogative, women generally don't accept to be called this way_
- marinier m
- sous-marin
marine m (plural marines)
- Marine (member of the United States Marine Corps)
marine
- inflection of mariner:
- “marine”, in Trésor de la langue française informatisé [Digitized Treasury of the French Language], 2012
- animer, manier, minera, ranime, ranimé
marine m (invariable)
- marine (type of soldier)
See the etymology of the corresponding lemma form.
marine f
See the etymology of the corresponding lemma form.
marine f
marine
marīne
marine
marine m (definite singular marinen, indefinite plural mariner, definite plural marinene)
- a navy
- marinebase
- marineblå
- marinefartøy
- “marine” in The Bokmål Dictionary.
marine
marine m (definite singular marinen, indefinite plural marinar, definite plural marinane)
- a navy
- marinebase
- marineblå
- marinefartøy
- “marine” in The Nynorsk Dictionary.
marine
- inflection of marinar:
marine m or f by sense (plural marines)
- marine (soldier of USA or UK)
marine
- inflection of marinar:
- “marine”, in Diccionario de la lengua española [Dictionary of the Spanish Language] (in Spanish), online version 23.8.1, Royal Spanish Academy [Spanish: Real Academia Española], 15 December 2025