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marquis
1[ mahr-kwis, mahr-kee; French mar-kee ]
noun
- a nobleman ranking next below a duke and above an earl or count.
Marquis
2[ mahr-kwis ]
noun
- Don(ald Robert Perry), 1878–1937, U.S. humorist and poet.
Marquis
1/ ˈmɑːkwɪs /
noun
- MarquisDon(ald Robert Perry)18781937MUSWRITING: humorous writer Don ( ald Robert Perry ). 1878–1937, US humorist; author of archy and mehitabel (1927)
marquis
2/ ˈmɑːkwɪs; marki; mɑːˈkiː /
noun
- (in various countries) a nobleman ranking above a count, corresponding to a British marquess. The title of marquis is often used in place of that of marquess
Word History and Origins
Word History and Origins
Origin of marquis1
Example Sentences
He was a minor nobleman, in fact—a marquis.
What keeps the whole thing from drifting completely off into the ether is how Mrs. Harris and the marquis bond over the loss of a loved one.”
What keeps the whole thing from drifting completely off into the ether is how Mrs. Harris and the marquis bond over the loss of a loved one.
Cocherel had been singled out by the Baron de Vastey in his treatise on the horrors of slavery, but in flowing handwriting, the commissioner’s note taker recorded the marquis’s losses with bureaucratic dispassion:
L’Hôpital was so enthralled by the new mathematics that he persuaded Bernoulli to send him all Bernoulli’s new mathematical discoveries for the marquis to use as he desired, in return for cash.
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