I believe you are referring to the phrase, "Rose through the ranks." Generally it means someone who started at a lower position and worked their way up to higher positions. Viper1
'In the hope that' is the correct phrase.
This is not a sentence it is a phrase and as a phrase it is correct.
Both may be correct with different meaning. Use rose INTO the air ( for example as an airplane taking off ) but rose IN the air ( as smoke above a fire)
I love you too, babe is the correct phrase
"Your sisters' names are Rose and Mary."
'In the hope that' is the correct phrase.
If you are referring to this sentence, no, it does not resemble a correct phrase AT ALL.
This is not a sentence it is a phrase and as a phrase it is correct.
Did they....?
That is the correct spelling of "phrase" (word group, or to use specific words).
The correct phrase is "sufficient proof".
No, the correct phrase is veni vidi vici.
It depends on how you use the phrase: Can you provide me a copy of your CV? - correct
No, "ad verbatim" is not a correct phrase in Latin. The correct phrase would be "ad verbum," which means exactly, word for word.
The phrase "how don't I" is not grammatically correct. A more correct way to phrase it would be "why don't I."
He rose so quickly through the ranks because he accused his comprtitors and had them tried and executed
yes it's correct. is a phrase..