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  1. to make a mark on something or someone: Make sure you don't mark the walls while you're moving the furniture around. A dark carpet won't mark as easily as a light one.

  2. From Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English mark somebody/something ↔ out phrasal verb 1 to show the shape or position of something by drawing lines around it A volleyball court had been marked out on the grass. 2 British English to make someone or something seem very different from or better than other similar people or things mark somebody...

  3. verb. /mɑrk/ Verb Forms. write/draw. [transitive] to write or draw a symbol, line, etc. on something in order to give information about it mark A (with B) Items marked with an asterisk can be omitted. mark B on A Prices are marked on the goods. mark somebody/something + adj.

  4. mark somebody/something + adj. The teacher marked her absent (= made a mark by her name to show that she was absent). Why have you marked this wrong? Do not open any mail marked ‘Confidential’. mark something as something Certain words were marked as important. Extra Examples. Oxford Collocations Dictionary. Definitions on the go.

  5. A mark is a point that is given for a correct answer or for doing something well in an exam or competition. A mark can also be a written symbol such as a letter that indicates how good a student's or competitor's work or performance is.

  6. 1 day ago · When you mark something, you leave a mark on it, check it off, cross it out, or label it. You can also mark something by noticing or acknowledging it: "Let's mark your birthday with a big party!" Shopkeepers mark prices on goods, and a "mark down" is a reduction in price.

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  8. The meaning of MARK is a boundary land. How to use mark in a sentence. Synonym Discussion of Mark.