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flank (n.)

late Old English flanc "flank, fleshy part of the side," from Old French flanc "hip, side," from Frankish or another Germanic source, from Proto-Germanic *hlanca- (source also of Old High German (h)lanca, Middle High German lanke "hip joint," German lenken "to bend, turn aside;" Old English hlanc "loose and empty, slender, flaccid;" Old Norse hlykkr "a bend, noose, loop"), from PIE root *kleng- "to bend, turn" (see link (n.)). Showing characteristic change of Germanic hl- to Romanic fl-. The military sense is first attested 1540s. Meaning "side" of anything is by 1620s. As an adjective, "pertaining to the flank or side," 1660s. Related: Flanked; flanking.

flank (v.)

1590s (military), "to guard the flank," also, "to menace the flank, fire sideways upon," from flank (n.). Meaning "stand or be placed at the side of" is from 1650s. Related: Flanked; flanking.

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Definitions of flank from WordNet
1
flank (n.)
the side of military or naval formation;
they attacked the enemy's right flank
Synonyms: wing
flank (n.)
a subfigure consisting of a side of something;
flank (n.)
a cut from the fleshy part of an animal's side between the ribs and the leg;
flank (n.)
the side between ribs and hipbone;
2
flank (v.)
be located at the sides of something or somebody;
From wordnet.princeton.edu