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I want to learn a person's order/position in his family i.e., among his siblings. So can I say:

"Where do you rank among your siblings?"

Is this usage correct? If not, can anyone provide me with some other better question?

lee
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    No, ask "Are you the eldest?" See https://ell.stackexchange.com/questions/79198/how-can-i-ask-a-person-in-which-order-in-his-family-among-the-siblings – Kate Bunting Dec 31 '20 at 09:25
  • Note: culturally most English speakers don't care to much about this. For example, we use the same word for "older brother" as "younger brother". – James K Dec 31 '20 at 10:59
  • Being the oldest or youngest or middle matters more than any other order for siblings. There are often cultural assumptions that the oldest would lead, youngest would follow and a "middle child" would be a peace-keeper and flexible.

    If you really care about the order, ask that. "Rank" implies better/worse than comparisons, which is usually inappropriate as a general question.

    – JohnP Dec 31 '20 at 14:17

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