rank

♦ rank /r'æŋk/ (ranks ranking ranked ranker rankest)
1 [N-VAR] with supp
Someone's rank is the position or grade that they have in an organization.
He eventually rose to the rank of captain...
The former head of counter-intelligence had been stripped of his rank and privileges.
2 [N-VAR] usu with supp
Someone's rank is the social class, especially the high social class, that they belong to. (FORMAL)
He must be treated as a hostage of high rank, not as a common prisoner.
3 [VERB] V n ord in/out of n, be V-ed in n, V in/among n
If an official organization ranks someone or something 1st, 5th, or 50th, for example, they calculate that the person or thing has that position on a scale. You can also say that someone or something ranks 1st, 5th, or 50th, for example.
The report ranks the UK 20th out of 22 advanced nations...
...the only British woman to be ranked in the top 50 of the women's world rankings...
Mr Short does not even rank in the world's top ten.
4 [VERB] V adj among n, V n adj among n, V as adj, V n as adj, V as n
If you say that someone or something ranks high or low on a scale or if you rank them high or low, you are saying how good or important you think they are.
His prices rank high among those of other contemporary photographers...
Investors ranked South Korea high among Asian nations...
St Petersburg's night life ranks as more exciting than the capital's...
18 per cent of women ranked sex as very important in their lives...
The Ritz-Carlton in Aspen has to rank as one of the most extraordinary hotels I have ever been to...
5 [N-PLURAL] with supp
The ranks of a group or organization are the people who belong to it.
There were some misgivings within the ranks of the media too...
6 [N-PLURAL] the N, oft prep N
The ranks are the ordinary members of an organization, especially of the armed forces.
Most store managers have worked their way up through the ranks.
7 [N-COUNT] usu N of n
A rank of people or things is a row of them.
Ranks of police in riot gear stood nervously by...
8 [N-COUNT]
A taxi rank is a place on a city street where taxis park when they are available for hire. (mainly BRIT; in AM, use stand)
The man led the way to the taxi rank...
9 [ADJ] ADJ n
You can use rank to emphasize a bad or undesirable quality that exists in an extreme form. (FORMAL)
He called it `rank hypocrisy' that the government was now promoting equal rights.
= sheer
10 [ADJ]
You can describe something as rank when it has a strong and unpleasant smell. (OLD-FASHIONED, WRITTEN)
The kitchen was rank with the smell of drying uniforms.
...the rank smell of unwashed clothes.
11 [PHRASE] V inflects
If you say that a member of a group or organization breaks ranks, you mean that they disobey the instructions of their group or organization.
Britain appears unlikely to break ranks with other members of the European Union.
12 [PHRASE] V inflects
If you say that the members of a group close ranks, you mean that they are supporting each other only because their group is being criticized.
Institutions tend to close ranks when a member has been accused of misconduct.
13 [PHRASE] V inflects
If you experience something, usually something bad, that other people have experienced, you can say that you have joined their ranks.
Last month, 370,000 Americans joined the ranks of the unemployed...
14 [PHRASE] V inflects
If you say that someone in authority pulls rank, you mean that they unfairly force other people to do what they want because of their higher rank or position.
The Captain pulled rank and made his sergeant row the entire way.rank and file
[N-SING] usu the N
The rank and file are the ordinary members of an organization or the ordinary workers in a company, as opposed to its leaders or managers. (JOURNALISM)
There was widespread support for him among the rank and file...taxi rank (taxi ranks)
[N-COUNT]
A taxi rank is a place where taxis wait for passengers, for example at an airport or outside a station. (BRIT; in AM, use taxi stand)

Popular posts from this blog

abreast

ablaze

allowance