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1 rank
I 1. [ræŋk] noun1) (a line or row (especially of soldiers or taxis): The officer ordered the front rank to fire.) fila2) ((in the army, navy etc) a person's position of importance: He was promoted to the rank of sergeant/colonel.) posto3) (a social class: the lower social ranks.) classe2. verb(to have, or give, a place in a group, according to importance: I would rank him among our greatest writers; Apes rank above dogs in intelligence.) classificar(-se)II [ræŋk] adjective1) (complete; absolute: rank stupidity; The race was won by a rank outsider.) completo2) (unpleasantly stale and strong: a rank smell of tobacco.) rançoso•- rankness* * *rank1[ræŋk] n 1 linha, fila, fileira. 2 grau, graduação, posto. 3 ordem, classe, série. 4 qualidade, distinção, posição, dignidade, categoria. • vt+vi 1 enfileirar. 2 tomar posição. 3 ter certo grau ou posição. 4 pôr em ordem, classificar, colocar por graus. 5 superar (em grau ou classe), preceder. the general ranks a captain / o general precede um capitão. 6 avaliar, estimar, dar certo grau. 7 sl entregar, delatar. a man of rank um homem de posição. in the first rank na primeira ordem ou classe. rank and fashion gente da alta sociedade. rank and file a) soldados rasos. b) gente comum. rank of general grau ou posto de general. the rank a tropa, o exército. to break rank ( soldiers) ficar fora de forma. to keep rank ( soldiers) ficar em forma. to pull one’s rank abusar da autoridade, trazer num cortado. to rank first figurar em primeiro lugar. to rank the cities for population classificar as cidades por população. to take rank of ter precedência sobre. to take rank with enfileirar-se.————————rank2[ræŋk] adj 1 alto e áspero, espesso. 2 viçoso, florescente, luxuriante. 3 rico, fértil (de terras). 4 rançoso, malcheiroso, de mau gosto. 5 completo, extremo, rematado (em sentido desfavorável). 6 grosseiro, ordinário, indecente. rank ingratitude extrema ingratidão.
См. также в других словарях:
precede something with — preface something with. → precede … English new terms dictionary
precede something with something — preˈcede sth with sth derived to do or say sth to introduce sth else • She preceded her speech with a vote of thanks to the committee. Main entry: ↑precedederived … Useful english dictionary
precede — verb come or go before in time, order, or position. ↘(precede something with) preface something with. Derivatives preceding adjective Origin ME: from OFr. preceder, from L. praecedere, from prae before + cedere go … English new terms dictionary
Precede — Pre*cede , v. t. [imp. & p. p. {Preceded}; p. pr. & vb. n. {Preceding}.] [L. praecedere, praecessum; prae before + cedere to go, to be in motion: cf. F. pr[ e]ceder. See {Pre }, and {Cede}.] 1. To go before in order of time; to occur first with… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
precede — ► VERB 1) come or go before in time, order, or position. 2) (precede with) preface or introduce (something) with. DERIVATIVES preceding adjective. ORIGIN Latin praecedere go before … English terms dictionary
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precede vs proceed — Precede is a verb that means to be or to go before something or someone in time or space. For example: Ecological extinction caused by overfishing precedes other human disturbance to coastal ecosystems. Proceed is a verb that means to… … English dictionary of common mistakes and confusing words
precede vs proceed — Precede is a verb that means to be or to go before something or someone in time or space. For example: Ecological extinction caused by overfishing precedes other human disturbance to coastal ecosystems. Proceed is a verb that means to… … English dictionary of common mistakes and confusing words
precede — [prē sēd′, prisēd′] vt. preceded, preceding [ME preceden < MFr précéder < L praecedere: see PRE & CEDE] 1. to be, come, or go before in time, place, order, rank, or importance 2. to introduce with prefatory remarks, etc. vi. to be, come, or … English World dictionary
precede — verb ADVERB ▪ directly, immediately ▪ in the moments which immediately preceded the earthquake ▪ generally, often, typically, usually ▪ … Collocations dictionary
precede — precedable, adj. /pri seed /, v., preceded, preceding, n. v.t. 1. to go before, as in place, order, rank, importance, or time. 2. to introduce by something preliminary; preface: to precede one s statement with a qualification. v.i. 3. to go or… … Universalium