Some words came into everyday colloquial speech from various professions, for example, from military vocabulary. One such word is the noun "rank."
Rank is
What does this word mean in terms of lexicology?
The line is:
- In the army, this is a special type of construction, when everyone stands on the same line facing one side: At the divisional review, all the soldiers formed four lines.
- People standing on the same line: The commander examined the line, this company was ready for inspection.
- A very long row of something: At the factory, the children saw long lines of chairs and stools.
Morphological characteristics
A rank is an inanimate common noun of the feminine, 1st declension.
| Singular | Plural |
Nominative | *** stood without moving. | Smooth *** and aroused a sense of pride. |
Genitive | There is no *** and - some kind of winding curve. | We stayed with *** pioneers rehearsing building on the line. |
Dative | The commander approached the *** e soldier. | The sergeant glanced over at the absent-minded gaze. |
Accusative | I do not see here ***. | Father looked at *** and recruits, but did not find his son. |
Instrumental case | The colonel was dissatisfied with the resulting *** oh. | A plane flew over ***. |
Prepositional | The sergeant did not stand in *** e. | The platoon told the students about *** ah and how important it is to build correctly. |
Compatibility with adjectives, numerals, verbs and pronouns
To correctly build phrases with the word "rank", you should determine its compatibility with other words.
Adjectives:
- long ***;
- curve, uneven ***;
- correct, smooth ***;
- beautiful ***.
Numerals:
- one, two, three, etc. ***;
- first, second ***.
Verbs (if you take a noun in the nominative case, you get not a phrase, but an unexpanded sentence) :
- *** worth it;
- *** happy;
- *** split up;
- *** has moved;
- see ***;
- check ***;
- build ***.
Pronouns:
- some ***;
- that ***;
- this is ***.