As a name: the English form of the Latin name Marcus comes from the name of Mars in Roman mythology, which means "Mars".
Noun (short for noun)? Mark; Traces; Scores; Trademark; Five? Dirt; Scoring; Attention; mark
Past tense: mark? Past participle:? Marked? Now participle:? Mark? Third person singular:? mark
Lexical collocation
There are traces of ... leave traces.
make a name for oneself
Extended data:
Use of trademarks
Word usage
(noun)
1. When Mark explains "traces, stains and spots", he refers to small spots or broken parts on the surface of something.
2. Mark refers to the score of a subject or the grade expressed by letters when explaining "score, grade symbol", which is often used with for [in] to indicate that the verb "score" is often used in get〔gain〕].
3. when mark is used as an uncountable noun, it is interpreted as "reputation, impression and influence", which can be used with possessive pronouns, but not with articles a or the.
Mark can also be used as a sign to show the characteristics.
(verb)
Mark basically means "leave a mark, mark, mark and score", which can be interpreted as "show" by extension.
6.mark can be used as both a transitive verb and an intransitive verb. When used as transitive verbs, nouns, pronouns and interrogative sentences can be used as objects, adjectives can also be used as compound objects of complements, and they can be used in passive structures. When used as intransitive verbs, active forms sometimes have passive meanings.