rank
nounA row or line, applied to troops; a line of men standing abreast or side by side, and as opposed to file, a line running the length of a company, battalion or regiment. Keep your ranks; dress your ranks. Fierce fiery warriors fight upon the clouds in ranks and squadrons and right form of war.
rank
Ranks, in the plural, the order of common soldiers; as, to reduce an officer to the ranks.
rank
A row; a line of things, or things in a line; as a rank of osiers.
rank
Degree; grade; in military affairs; as the rank of captain, colonel or general; the rank of vice-admiral.
rank
Degree of elevation in civil life or station; the order of elevation or of subordination. We say, all ranks and orders of men; every man’s dress and behavior should correspond with his rank; the highest and the lowest ranks of men or of other intelligent beings.
rank
Class; order; division; any portion or number of things to which place, degree or order is assigned. Profligate men, by their vices, sometimes degrade themselves to the rank of brutes.
rank
Degree of dignity, eminence or excellence; as a writer of the first rank; a lawyer of high rank. These are all virtues of a meaner rank.
rank
Dignity; high place or degree in the orders of men; as a man of rank. Rank and file, the order of common soldiers. Ten officers and three hundred rank and file fell in the action. To fill the ranks, to supply the whole number, or a competent number. To take rank, to enjoy precedence, or to have the right of taking a higher place. In Great Britain, the king’s sons take rank of all the other nobles.
rank
adjectiveLuxuriant in growth; being of vigorous growth; as rank grass; rank weeds. Seven ears came up upon one stalk, rank and good. Genesis 41:5.
rank
Causing vigorous growth; producing luxuriantly; very rich and fertile; as, land is rank.
rank
Strong scented; as rank smelling rue.
rank
Rancid; musty; as oil of a rank smell.
rank
Inflamed with venereal appetite.
rank
Strong to the taste; high tasted. Divers sea fowls taste rank of the fish on which they feed.
rank
Rampant; high grown; raised to a high degree; excessive; as rank pride; rank idolatry. I do forgive thy rankest faults.
rank
Gross; coarse.
rank
Strong; clinching. Take rank hold. Hence,
rank
Excessive; exceeding the actual value; as a rank modus in law. To set rank, as the iron of a plane, to set it so as to take off a thick shaving.
rank
verb transitiveTo place abreast or in a line.
rank
To place in a particular class, order or division. Poets were ranked in the class of philosophers. Heresy is ranked with idolatry and witchcraft.