a method of carrying a resisting person in which each limb is held by one person and the victim is carried horizontally and face downwards
2.
any method of making a resisting person move forward against his or her will
verb
3. (transitive)
to carry in a frogmarch or cause to move forward unwillingly
frogmarch in American English
(ˈfrɑɡˌmɑːrtʃ, ˈfrɔɡ-)
transitive verb
to force (a person) to march with the arms pinioned firmly behind the back
Word origin
[1930–35; frog1 + march1]This word is first recorded in the period 1930–35. Other words that entered Englishat around the same time include: DNA, cloverleaf, hypercorrection, old school tie, video
Examples of 'frogmarch' in a sentence
frogmarch
We should be able to frogmarch her on to a plane.
The Sun (2016)
These powerful sleep chemicals frogmarch men off to the land of nod — whether we like it or not.