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  1. rank and file. noun [ + sing/pl verb ] uk / ˌræŋk ən ˈfaɪl / us / ˌræŋk ən ˈfaɪl / Add to word list. the ordinary workers in a company or the ordinary members of an organization, and not the leaders: The party's rank and file are beginning to question the prime minister's choice of advisers. [ before noun ] rank-and-file police officers.

  2. Significado de rank and file en inglés. rank and file. noun [ + sing/pl verb ] uk / ˌræŋk ən ˈfaɪl / us / ˌræŋk ən ˈfaɪl / Add to word list. the ordinary workers in a company or the ordinary members of an organization, and not the leaders: The party's rank and file are beginning to question the prime minister's choice of advisers.

  3. noun. Synonyms of rank and file. 1. : the enlisted personnel of an armed force. 2. : the individuals who constitute the body of an organization, society, or nation as distinguished from the leaders. rank-and-file. ˌraŋk-ᵊn-ˈfī (-ə)l.

  4. rank and file. noun [ + sing/pl verb ] us / ˌræŋk ən ˈfaɪl / uk / ˌræŋk ən ˈfaɪl / Add to word list. the ordinary workers in a company or the ordinary members of an organization, and not the leaders: The party's rank and file are beginning to question the president's's choice of advisers. [ before noun ] rank-and-file police officers.

  5. Rank and file may refer to: A military term relating to the horizontal "ranks" (rows) and vertical "files" (columns) of individual foot-soldiers, exclusive of the officers; A term derived from the above used to refer to enlisted troops, as opposed to the officers; Rank and file (chess), the rows and columns on a chessboard

  6. Hace 6 días · noun. 1. the ordinary soldiers of an army, excluding the officers. 2. the great mass or majority of any group or organization, as opposed to the leadership. 3. (modifier) of, relating to, or characteristic of the rank and file. rank-and-file opinion. rank-and-file support. Also: rank-and-file. Collins English Dictionary.

  7. file’ is the lining up of soldiers into. ranks (that is, lines). Rank and file now refers to the ordinary members of any group but it originated as a military term. The rows and columns of soldiers, drawn up for drill and not including officers, were called ‘ranks’ and ‘files’.