Misordered


[awr-der] /ˈɔr dər/

noun
1.
an authoritative direction or instruction; command; mandate.
2.
a command of a court or judge.
3.
a command or notice issued by a military organization or a military commander to troops, sailors, etc.
4.
the disposition of things following one after another, as in space or time; succession or sequence:
The names were listed in alphabetical order.
5.
a condition in which each thing is properly disposed with reference to other things and to its purpose; methodical or harmonious arrangement:
You must try to give order to your life.
6.
formal disposition or array:
the order of the troops.
7.
proper, satisfactory, or working condition.
8.
state or condition generally:
His financial affairs were in good order.
9.
conformity or obedience to law or established authority; absence of disturbance, riot, revolt, unruliness, etc.:
A police officer was there to maintain order.
10.
customary mode of procedure; established practice or usage.
11.
the customary or prescribed mode of proceeding in debates or the like, or in the conduct of deliberative or legislative bodies, public meetings, etc.:
parliamentary rules of order.
12.
prevailing course or arrangement of things; established system or regime:
The old order is changing.
13.
conformity to this.
14.
a direction or commission to make, provide, or furnish something:
The salesclerk will take your order.
15.
a quantity of goods or items purchased or sold:
The druggist is sending the order right over.
16.
Grammar.

17.
any of the nine grades of angels in medieval angelology.
Compare (def 1).
18.
Mathematics.

19.
any class, kind, or sort, as of persons or things, distinguished from others by nature or character:
talents of a high order.
20.
Biology. the usual major subdivision of a class or subclass in the classification of organisms, consisting of several families.
21.
a rank, grade, or class of persons in a community.
22.
a group or body of persons of the same profession, occupation, or pursuits:
the clerical order.
23.
a body or society of persons living by common consent under the same religious, moral, or social regulations.
24.
Ecclesiastical. any of the degrees or grades of clerical office.
Compare , .
25.
a monastic society or fraternity:
the Franciscan order.
26.
a written direction to pay money or deliver goods, given by a person legally entitled to dispose of it:
delivery order; exchange order.
27.
Architecture.

28.
orders, the rank or status of an ordained Christian minister.
29.
Usually, orders. the rite or sacrament of ordination.
30.
a prescribed form of divine service or of administration of a rite or ceremony.
31.
the service itself.
32.
the visible structures essential or desirable to the nature of the church, involving especially ministry, polity, and sacraments.
33.
a society or fraternity of knights, of combined military and monastic character, as, in the Middle Ages, the Knights Templars.
34.
a modern organization or society more or less resembling the knightly orders:
fraternal orders.
35.
(initial capital letter) British.

36.
Chiefly British. a pass for admission to a theater, museum, or the like.
verb (used with object)
37.
to give an order, direction, or command to:
The infantry divisions were ordered to advance.
38.
to direct or command to go or come as specified:
to order a person out of one’s house.
39.
to prescribe:
The doctor ordered rest for the patient.
40.
to direct to be made, supplied, or furnished:
to order a copy of a book.
41.
to regulate, conduct, or manage:
to order one’s life for greater leisure.
42.
to arrange methodically or suitably:
to order chessmen for a game.
43.
Mathematics. to arrange (the elements of a set) so that if one element precedes another, it cannot be preceded by the other or by elements that the other precedes.
44.
to ordain, as God or fate does.
45.
to invest with clerical rank or authority.
verb (used without object)
46.
to give an order or issue orders:
I wish to order, but the waiter is busy.
Idioms
47.
a tall order, a very difficult or formidable task, requirement, or demand:
Getting the crop harvested with so few hands to help was a tall order.
Also, a large order.
48.
call to order, to begin (a meeting):
The meeting was called to order at 3 o’clock.
49.
in order,

50.
in order that, so that; to the end that:
We ought to leave early in order that we may not miss the train.
51.
in order to, as a means to; with the purpose of:
She worked summers in order to save money for college.
52.
in short order, with promptness or speed; rapidly:
The merchandise arrived in short order.
53.
on order, ordered but not yet received:
We’re out of stock in that item, but it’s on order.
54.
on the order of,

55.
out of order,

56.
to order, according to one’s individual requirements or instructions:
a suit made to order; carpeting cut to order.
/ˈɔːdə/
noun
1.
a state in which all components or elements are arranged logically, comprehensibly, or naturally
2.
an arrangement or disposition of things in succession; sequence: alphabetical order
3.
an established or customary method or state, esp of society
4.
a peaceful or harmonious condition of society: order reigned in the streets
5.
(often pl) a class, rank, or hierarchy: the lower orders
6.
(biology) any of the taxonomic groups into which a class is divided and which contains one or more families. Carnivora, Primates, and Rodentia are three orders of the class Mammalia
7.
an instruction that must be obeyed; command
8.
a decision or direction of a court or judge entered on the court record but not included in the final judgment
9.

10.
a procedure followed by an assembly, meeting, etc
11.
(capital when part of a name) a body of people united in a particular aim or purpose
12.
(usually capital) Also called religious order. a group of persons who bind themselves by vows in order to devote themselves to the pursuit of religious aims
13.
(history) a society of knights constituted as a fraternity, such as the Knights Templars
14.

15.

16.
(Christianity)

17.
a form of Christian Church service prescribed to be used on specific occasions
18.
(Judaism) one of the six sections of the Mishna or the corresponding tractates of the Talmud
19.
(maths)

20.
short for order of magnitude
21.
(military) the order, the dress, equipment, or formation directed for a particular purpose or undertaking: drill order, battle order
22.
a tall order, something difficult, demanding, or exacting
23.
in order

24.
(preposition; foll by an infinitive) in order to, so that it is possible to: to eat in order to live
25.
(conjunction) in order that, with the purpose that; so that
26.
keep order, to maintain or enforce order
27.
of the order of, in the order of, having an approximately specified size or quantity
28.
on order, having been ordered or commissioned but not having been delivered
29.
out of order

30.
to order

verb
31.
(transitive) to give a command to (a person or animal to do or be something)
32.
to request (something) to be supplied or made, esp in return for payment: he ordered a hamburger
33.
(transitive) to instruct or command to move, go, etc (to a specified place): they ordered her into the house
34.
(transitive; may take a clause as object) to authorize; prescribe: the doctor ordered a strict diet
35.
(transitive) to arrange, regulate, or dispose (articles) in their proper places
36.
(of fate or the gods) to will; ordain
37.
(transitive) (rare) to ordain
interjection
38.
an exclamation of protest against an infringement of established procedure
39.
an exclamation demanding that orderly behaviour be restored
n.

early 13c., “body of persons living under a religious discipline,” from Old French ordre “position, estate; rule, regulation; religious order” (11c.), from earlier ordene, from Latin ordinem (nominative ordo) “row, rank, series, arrangement,” originally “a row of threads in a loom,” from Italic root *ord- “to arrange, arrangement” (cf. ordiri “to begin to weave,” e.g. in primordial), of unknown origin.

Meaning “a rank in the (secular) community” is first recorded c.1300; meaning “command, directive” is first recorded 1540s, from the notion of “to keep in order.” Military and honorary orders grew our of the fraternities of Crusader knights. Business and commerce sense is attested from 1837. In natural history, as a classification of living things, it is first recorded 1760. Meaning “condition of a community which is under the rule of law” is from late 15c.

Phrase in order to (1650s) preserves etymological notion of “sequence.” The word reflects a medieval notion: “a system of parts subject to certain uniform, established ranks or proportions,” and was used of everything from architecture to angels. Old English expressed many of the same ideas with endebyrdnes. In short order “without delay” is from 1834, American English; order of battle is from 1769.
v.

c.1200, “give order to, to arrange in order,” from order (n.). Meaning “to give orders for or to” is from 1540s. Related: Ordered; ordering.

order or·der (ôr’dər)
n.
A taxonomic category of organisms ranking above a family and below a class.
order
(ôr’dər)
A group of organisms ranking above a family and below a class. See Table at taxonomy.

In biology, the classification lower than a class and higher than a family. Dogs and cats belong to the order of carnivores; human beings, monkeys, and apes belong to the order of primates. Flies and mosquitoes belong to the same order; so do birch trees and oak trees. (See Linnean classification.)

Related Terms

apple-pie order

Read Also:

  • Misordering

    [awr-der] /ˈɔr dər/ noun 1. an authoritative direction or instruction; command; mandate. 2. a command of a court or judge. 3. a command or notice issued by a military organization or a military commander to troops, sailors, etc. 4. the disposition of things following one after another, as in space or time; succession or sequence: […]

  • Misorganize

    [awr-guh-nahyz] /ˈɔr gəˌnaɪz/ verb (used with object), organized, organizing. 1. to form as or into a whole consisting of interdependent or coordinated parts, especially for united action: to organize a committee. 2. to systematize: to organize the files of an office. 3. to give structure or character to: to organize the elements of a composition. […]

  • Misorient

    [mis-awr-ee-ent, -ohr-] /mɪsˈɔr iˌɛnt, -ˈoʊr-/ verb (used with object) 1. to orient wrongly or improperly.

  • Misorientate

    [mis-awr-ee-uh n-teyt, -en-, -ohr-] /mɪsˈɔr i ənˌteɪt, -ɛn-, -ˈoʊr-/ verb (used with object), misorientated, misorientating. 1. .

  • Mispackage

    [pak-ij] /ˈpæk ɪdʒ/ noun 1. a bundle of something, usually of small or medium size, that is and wrapped or boxed; parcel. 2. a container, as a box or case, in which something is or may be packed. 3. something conceived of as a compact unit having particular characteristics: That child is a package of […]


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