|
CLASSIFIED |
Ranked |
|
RATED |
Ranked |
|
SEEDS |
Ranked players |
|
PRIORITISED |
Ranked first |
|
|
SERAPHIM |
Highest-ranked angels |
|
SEED |
Ranked performer |
|
PRELATE |
Highly ranked clergyman |
|
ARCHBISHOP |
Highly ranked clergyman |
|
|
CEDE |
�Give in,” said ranked payer |
|
CHARGEHAND |
Worker ranked below a foreman |
|
PRIVATESCHOOL |
Where lowly-ranked soldiers go for tuition? |
|
DISTICHOUS |
Disposed in two vertical rows; two-ranked. |
|
GENERALISED |
Inferred that highest ranked officer is editor |
|
CABDRIVER |
He might be ranked along with his colleagues |
|
OFFICERS |
Ranked personnel needed if forces are in disarray |
|
XIPHIDIUM |
A genus of plants of the order Haemodraceae, having
two-ranked, sword-shaped leaves. |
|
MEGAPHYTON |
An extinct genus of tree ferns with large, two-ranked
leaves, or fronds. |
|
RANGE |
To be placed in order; to be ranked; to admit of
arrangement or classification; to rank. |
|
CLASS |
A group of individuals ranked together as possessing common
characteristics; as, the different classes of society; the educated
class; the lower classes. |
|
SUBALTERN |
Ranked or ranged below; subordinate; inferior;
specifically (Mil.), ranking as a junior officer; being below the rank
of captain; as, a subaltern officer. |
|
DORIC |
...est of the
three orders of architecture used by the Greeks, but ranked as second
of the five orders adopted by the Romans. See Abacus, Capital, ... |