As a noun: The marshal put the prisoner in the back of his car, then called for aid for the victim.
As a verb: The teacher can marshal the class onto the bus as soon as it pulls up to the curb.
Marshal is a scary person.
No one knows which passenger on the flight is a Federal Marshal.
It is pronounced the same in Hebrew: marshal (מרשל)
Vigilante groups would sometimes lynch suspected rustlers or killers. A lynch mob could occasionally be stopped by a respected sheriff or marshal.
Foch
what does this sentence mean. Marshal was glad that the girls wre happy to get him out from underfoot.
The word marshal is a common noun, a word for any marshal.A proper noun is the name of a person, place, thing, or a title; for example:Deputy US Marshal, Bass Reeves (1838-1910)Marshal Island, Tay ONT, CanadaMarshal Street, Brookline, MA'US Marshals' (1998) with Tommy Lee Jones
Yes. It was used in the 1700s for field marshal.
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a sentence with the word variety
John Marshal - Earl Marshal - died in 1165.
The word is sentence