phalanx
pha·lanx / ˈfālangks; ˈfal-/ • n. 1. (pl. pha·lanx·es) a group of people or things of a similar type forming a compact body or brought together for a common purpose: he headed past the phalanx of waiting reporters to the line of limos. ∎ a body of troops or police officers, standing or moving in close formation: six hundred marchers set off, led by a phalanx of police. ∎ (in ancient Greece) a body of Macedonian infantry with long spears, drawn up in close order with shields overlapping.2. (pl. pha·lan·ges / fəˈlanjēz; fāˈlanjēz/ ) Anat. a bone of the finger or toe.
Phalanx
Phalanx
a line or array of battle; a compact group of people or animals prepared for attack or defence; a body of persons or things drawn up together in a common purpose.
Examples : phalanx of cavaliers and dames, 1837; of elms, 1891; of Greeks, 1983; of infantry; of lawyers, 1817; of sheep, 1785; of soldiers, 1553; of migrating storks, 1733.
phalanx
phalanx
So phalange XVI. — F. — L.