See also: Merse

English

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Etymology

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Middle English merse, variant form of mersh, whence also marsh (see that entry for more).

Pronunciation

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Noun

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merse (plural merses)

  1. Alluvial, often marshy land by the side of a river, estuary or sea.
    • 1926, The Journal of Ecology, volumes 14-15, page 312:
      Owing probably to the channel lying obliquely to those mud flats, the flood rushes up the river with a bore, the front wave of which may be several feet high. As a result, the loose mud is churned up by every tide and the water that inundates the merse always contains much mud in suspension. Consequently the merse must be continually increasing in height. That the siltings may be rapid in favourable circumstances is shown near Kirkconnell where mooring bollards are seen []

Italian

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Etymology 1

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Verb

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merse

  1. third-person singular past historic of mergere

Etymology 2

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Participle

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merse f pl

  1. feminine plural of merso

Anagrams

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Latin

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Participle

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merse

  1. vocative masculine singular of mersus