1. marco - Noun
2. marco - Interjection
3. Marco - Proper noun
A male given name from Spanish
A male given name from Romance langauges, equivalent to English Mark
A male given name from Italian
A male given name from Portugese
Marco
Shouted by a player of the game Marco Polo. Compare Polo.
marco
Alternative letter-case form of Marco
Coordinate terms: polo, marco polo
marco m (plural marcos)
(historical) A traditional Spanish and Portuguese unit of mass, usually equivalent to 230 g and particularly used for trade in gold and silver.
Adams recommended Davies to Marco Bossio, a teacher at the St. Nicholas Catholic School and director of the football academy. Source: Internet
Almost nothing is known about the childhood of Marco Polo until he was fifteen years old, excepting that he probably spent part of his childhood in Venice.sfnsfn Meanwhile, Marco Polo's mother died, and an aunt and uncle raised him. Source: Internet
After Bush ended his campaign following the South Carolina primary, Dole endorsed Florida Senator Marco Rubio's campaign. Source: Internet
After Criswell's death, his longtime friend Paul Marco released Criswell's song "Someone Walked Over My Grave" on a 7" record which was recorded by Criswell as a memorial song that he wanted released posthumously. Source: Internet
And due to her declining mental health and financial problems, she could not take care of her son, and Marco got full custody. Source: Internet
Amid the conflict, Michigan Rep. Justin Amash blasted Florida Sen. Marco Rubio for suggesting that the testimony and evidence used by the House should match the evidence in the Senate trial — a notion that suggests no new witnesses are needed. Source: Internet