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Ranked   /ræŋkt/   Listen
Ranked

adjective
1.
Arranged in a sequence of grades or ranks.  Synonyms: graded, stratified.



Rank

verb
(past & past part. ranked; pres. part. ranking)
1.
Take or have a position relative to others.
2.
Assign a rank or rating to.  Synonyms: grade, order, place, range, rate.  "The restaurant is rated highly in the food guide"
3.
Take precedence or surpass others in rank.  Synonym: outrank.



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"Ranked" Quotes from Famous Books



... once, and there Carl unearthed the Pension Schroeter on Sophien Platz. There we had two rooms and all the food we could eat,—far too much for us to eat, and oh! so delicious,—for fifty-five dollars a month for the entire family, although Jim hardly ranked as yet, economically speaking, as part of the consuming public. We drained Leipzig to the dregs—a good German idiom. Carl worked at his German steadily, almost frantically, with a lesson every day along with all his university work—a seven o'clock lecture ...
— An American Idyll - The Life of Carleton H. Parker • Cornelia Stratton Parker

... besides representing opposite poles, are also neighbours in the diagram. Here we encounter a picture characteristic of all earlier ways of looking at the world: the members of a system of phenomena, when ranked in due order of succession, were seen to turn back on themselves circle-wise ...
— Man or Matter • Ernst Lehrs

... into the pure light of the higher air, inviolable. They seemed halted in the presence of a commanding majesty who ranked ...
— The Path to Rome • Hilaire Belloc

... butterflies—group succeeding group. On the opposite side, in the shade, a solitary individual was passing slowly along the pavement. I knew him at a glance. It was the first poet, perhaps the greatest man, of his age and country. But why so solitary? It had been told me that he ranked among his friends and associates many of the highest names in the kingdom, and yet to-night not one of the hundreds who fluttered past appeared inclined to recognise him. He seemed too—but perhaps fancy misled me—as ...
— Wilson's Tales of the Borders and of Scotland, Volume 2 - Historical, Traditional, and Imaginative • Alexander Leighton

... have opinions which cannot be ranked with superstition, because they regard only natural effects. They expect better crops of grain by sowing their seed in the moon's increase. The moon has great influence in vulgar philosophy. In my memory it was a precept annually given in one of the ...
— Life Of Johnson, Volume 5 • Boswell


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