mare1

[mair] /mɛər/
noun
1.
a fully mature female horse or other equine animal.
Origin
before 900; Middle English, variant of mere, Old English m(i)ere; cognate with Dutch merrie, German Mähre, Old Norse merr; akin to Old English mearh, Old Norse marr, Irish marc horse. See marshal

mare2

[mair] /mɛər/
noun, Obsolete
1.
nightmare (def 3).
Origin
before 900; Middle English, Old English; cognate with German Mahre, Old Norse mara. See nightmare

mare3

[mahr-ey, mair-ee] /ˈmɑr eɪ, ˈmɛər i/
noun, plural maria
[mahr-ee-uh, mair-] /ˈmɑr i ə, ˈmɛər-/ (Show IPA).
Astronomy
1.
any of the several large, dark plains on the moon and Mars: Galileo believed that the lunar features were seas when he first saw them through a telescope.
Origin
1680-90; < Latin: sea

Mar.E.

1.
Marine Engineer.

Sirenum

[si-ree-nuh m] /sɪˈri nəm/
noun
1.
Mare, Mare Sirenum.

mare nostrum

[mah-re nohs-troo m; English mair-ee nos-truh m, mahr-ey] /ˈmɑ rɛ ˈnoʊs trʊm; English ˈmɛər i ˈnɒs trəm, ˈmɑr eɪ/
Latin.
1.
our sea, especially the Mediterranean to the ancient Romans.
Examples from the web for mare
  • Miss one, and he'll run reproductive riot with every unprotected mare.
  • In general, mare regions of the moon are darker, because their rocks contain more iron oxide.
  • The mare deserts him to run with the wild horses in the mountains until her colt is born.
  • One night, the sly stud sneaks upon the other's land and steals the mare.
  • Also contributing to their smell might have been their diet, which at certain times of the year was mainly mare's milk.
British Dictionary definitions for mare

mare1

/mɛə/
noun
1.
the adult female of a horse or zebra
Word Origin
C12: from Old English, of Germanic origin; related to Old High German mariha, Old Norse merr mare

mare2

/ˈmɑːreɪ; -rɪ/
noun (pl) maria (ˈmɑːrɪə)
1.
(capital when part of a name) any of a large number of huge dry plains on the surface of the moon, visible as dark markings and once thought to be seas: Mare Imbrium (Sea of Showers)
2.
a similar area on the surface of Mars, such as Mare Sirenum
Word Origin
from Latin: sea

mare nostrum

/ˈmɑːreɪ ˈnɒstrʊm/
noun
1.
the Latin name for the Mediterranean
Word Origin
literally: our sea
Word Origin and History for mare
n.

"female horse," Old English mere (Mercian), myre (West Saxon), fem. of mearh "horse," from Proto-Germanic *markhjon- (cf. Old Saxon meriha, Old Norse merr, Old Frisian merrie, Dutch merrie, Old High German meriha, German Mähre "mare"), said to be of Gaulish origin (cf. Irish and Gaelic marc, Welsh march, Breton marh "horse"). No known cognates beyond Germanic and Celtic. As the name of a throw in wrestling, it is attested from c.1600. Mare's nest "illusory discovery, excitement over something which does not exist" is from 1610s.

"broad, dark areas of the moon," 1765, from Latin mare "sea" (see marine), applied to lunar features by Galileo and used thus in 17c. Latin works. They originally were thought to be actual seas.

"night-goblin, incubus," Old English mare "incubus, nightmare, monster," from mera, mære, from Proto-Germanic *maron "goblin" (cf. Middle Low German mar, Middle Dutch mare, Old High German mara, German Mahr "incubus," Old Norse mara "nightmare, incubus"), from PIE *mora- "incubus" (cf. first element in Old Irish Morrigain "demoness of the corpses," literally "queen of the nightmare," also Bulgarian, Serbian mora, Czech mura, Polish zmora "incubus;" French cauchemar, with first element from Old French caucher "to trample"), from root *mer- "to rub away, harm" (see morbid).

mare in Science
mare
  (mä'rā)   
Plural maria (mä'rē-ə)
Any of the large, low-lying dark areas on the Moon or on Mars or other inner planets. The lunar maria are believed to consist of volcanic basalts, and many are believed to be basins formed initially by large impacts with meteoroids and later filled with lava flows. Compare terra.