Dictionary
the phalanx
noun
An ancient Greek and Macedonian military unit that consisted of several ranks and files (lines) of soldiers in close array with joined shields and long spears.
synonyms
Exact(60)
They are called The Phalanx.
After that came "From This Moment On," where she outpowered the phalanx of strings behind her.
By this year, the phalanx of therapists visiting Chris, 5, seemed like family.
Alexander's core unit in the phalanx was the syntagma, normally 16 men deep.
The man maintains a distance of just a few feet from the phalanx of officers.
Though its exact origins are unknown, the Roman legion seems to have developed from the phalanx.
The phalanx of brass seems to split apart and collide violently.
Based on an agrarian-handicraft economy, the phalanx consisted of about 1500 people.
Work was voluntary and goods produced were the property of the phalanx.
Television and the phalanx of bodyguards could replace the whistle-stop and the baying multitudes.
For some observers, the phalanx around her was a sign of Trump's pathetic isolation.
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