< 1911 Encyclopædia Britannica

RANK (O.Fr. ranc or renc, mod. rang, generally connected with the O.E. and O.H.G. hring, a ring), a row or line, as of cabs or carriages, but especially of soldiers drawn up abreast in a line; in rank and file the rank is the horizontal line of soldiers, the file the vertical. From the sense of orderly arrangement rank is applied to grades or classes in a social or other organization, and particularly to a high grade, as in such expressions as a person of rank. This word must be distinguished from the adjective rank, over-luxuriant, coarse, strong, generally connected with the Low Ger. rank, thin, tall (cf. Du. rank, upright). The O.E. rinc, warrior, i.e. full-grown man, may be also connected with the word; Skeat refers also to rack, to pull out straight.

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