English-Thai Dictionary
Order Paper
N รายการ หัวข้อ ที่ อภิปราย ใน รัฐสภา แต่ละวัน rai-kan-hua-kor-ti-ar-pi-pai-nai-rad-ta-sa-pa
order
N ความเป็นระเบียบเรียบร้อย tidiness organization disorganization chaos kwam-pen-ra-biab-riab-roi
order
N คำสั่ง คำบัญชา command mandate kam-sang
order
N ลำดับ sequence succession lam-dub
order
N ใบสั่งซื้อ สินค้า คำ สั่งซื้อ สินค้า bai-sang-sue-sin-ka
order
VT จัดระเบียบ จัด ให้ เป็นระเบียบ arrange organize disorganize jad-ra-biab
order
VT สั่ง สั่งการ บงการ ออกคำสั่ง บัญชา command direct decree sang
order
VT สั่งซื้อ สั่งจอง book reserve sang-sue
order about / around
PHRV บอก ให้ ทำ บังคับ ให้ ทำ kick about push about bok-hai-tam
order book
N บันทึก ยอด สินค้า ที่ ลูกค้า สั่งซื้อ ban-tuek-yod-sin-ka-ti-luk-ka-sang-sue
order form
N แบบฟอร์ม สั่งซื้อ beab-from-sang-sue
order from
PHRV สั่ง มาจาก sang-ma-jak
order in
PHRV สั่ง ให้ เข้ามา สั่ง ให้ เข้าไป sang-hai-kao-ma
order of the day
IDM สิ่งจำเป็น สิ่ง ปกติ sing-jam-pen
order off
PHRV สั่ง ให้ ออกจาก sang-sai-ook-jak
order out
PHRV สั่ง ให้ ปฏิบัติหน้าที่ sang-hai-pa-ti-bud-na-ti
order out
PHRV สั่ง ให้ ออกจาก sang-hai-ook-jak
order up
PHRV สั่ง (ทหาร หรือ ยานพาหนะ ให้ ไป อยู่ แนวหน้า ใน การ รบ sang-hai-pai-yu-nai-neo-na-nai-kan-rob
ordered
ADJ ซึ่ง เป็นไป ตามระเบียบ ซึ่ง จัดเรียง ตาม ระบบ ซึ่ง เป็นระเบียบ well-organized arranged disordered sueng-pen-pai-tam-ra-biab
ordering
N การสั่งซื้อ buying arrangement kan-sang-sue
orderliness
N ความเป็นระเบียบ discipline neatness kwam-pen-ra-biab
orderly
ADJ ซึ่ง เป็นระเบียบเรียบร้อย ซึ่ง มีระเบียบ well-organized in order disorderly chaotic sueng-pen-ra-biab-riab-roi
orderly
ADJ ที่ เป็นไป ด้วย ความสงบ peaceable quiet riotous noisy ti-pen-pai-duai-kwam-sa-ngob
orderly
ADV อย่าง มีระเบียบ อย่าง มีแบบแผน methodically regularly yang-me-ra-riab
orderly
N ทหาร ที่ทำงาน ทั่วๆ ไป ให้ ทหาร ยศ สูง กว่า ทหาร รับ คำสั่ง ทหาร รับใช้ ta-han-ti-tam-ngan-tua-tua-pai-hai-ta-han-yod-suang-kwa
orderly
N เจ้าหน้าที่ โรงพยาบาล (ที่ ไม่มีความรู้ ทางการแพทย์ เช่น คน ขนส่ง ผู้ป่วย medical orderly jao-na-ti-rong-pa-ya-ban
Webster's 1828 Dictionary
ORDER
n.[L. ordo. ] 1. Regular disposition or methodical arrangement of things; a word of extensive application; as the order of troops or parade; the order of books in a library; the order of proceedings in a legislative assembly. Order is the life of business.
Good order is the foundation of all good things.
2. Proper state; as the muskets are all in good order. When the bodily organs are in order, a person is in health; when they are out of order, he is indisposed.
3. Adherence to the point in discussion, according to established rules of debate; as, the member is not in order, that is, he wanders from the question.
4. Established mode of proceeding. The motion is not in order.
5. Regularity; settled mode of operation.
This fact could not occur in the order of nature; it is against the natural order of things.
6. Mandate; precept; command; authoritative direction. I have received an order from the commander in chief. The general gave orders to march. There is an order of council to issue letters of marque.
7. Rule; regulation; as the rules and orders of a legislative house.
8. Regular government or discipline. It is necessary for society that good order should be observed. The meeting was turbulent; it was impossible to keep order.
9. Rank; class; division of men; as the order of nobles; the order of priests; the higher orders of society; men of the lowest order; order of knights; military orders, etc.
1 . A religious fraternity; as the order of Benedictines.
11. A division of natural objects, generally intermediate between class and genus. The classes, in the Linnean artificial system, are divided into orders, which include one or more genera. Linne also arranged vegetables, in his natural system, into groups of genera, called order. In the natural system of Jussieu, orders are subdivisions of classes.
12. Measures; care. Take some order for the safety and support of the soldiers.
Provide me soldiers whilst I take order for my own affairs.
13. In rhetoric, the placing of words and members in a sentence in such a manner as to contribute to force and beauty of expression, or to the clear illustration of the subject.
14. The title of certain ancient books containing the divine office and manner of its performance.
15. In architecture, a system of several members, ornaments and proportions of columns and pilasters; or a regular arrangement of the projecting parts of a building, especially of the columns, so as to form one beautiful whole. The orders are five, the Tuscan, Doric, Ionic, Corinthian, and Composite. The order consists of two principal members, the column, and the entablature, each of which is composed of three principal parts. Those of the column are the base, the shaft, and the capital; those of the entablature are the architrave, the frize, and the cornice. The height of the Tuscan column is 14 modules or semidiameters of the shaft at the bottom, and that os the entablature 3 1 /2. The height of the Doric order is 16 modules and that of the entablature 4; that of the Ionic is 18 modules, and that of the entablature 4 1 /2, that of the Corinthian order is 2 modules, and that of the entablature 5. The height of the Composite order agrees with that of the Corinthian.
In orders, set apart for the performance divine service; ordained to the work of the gospel ministry.
In order, for the purpose; to the end; as means to an end. The best knowledge is that which is of the greatest use in order to our eternal happiness.
General orders, the commands or notices which a military commander in chief issues to the troops under his command.
ORDER
v.t. 1. To regulate; to methodize; to systemize; to adjust; to subject to system in management and execution; as, to order domestic affairs with prudence.
2. To lead; to conduct; to subject to rules or laws.
To him that ordereth his conversation aright, will I show the salvation of God. Psalm 5 :23.
3. to direct; to command. the general ordered his troops to advance.
4. To manage; to treat.
How shall we order the child? Judges 13:12.
5. To ordain. [Not used. ]
6. To direct; to dispose in any particular manner.
Order my steps in thy word. Psalm 119:133.
ORDER
v.i.to give command or direction.
ORDERED
pp. Regulated; methodized; disposed; commanded; managed.
ORDERER
n. 1. One that gives orders.
2. One that methodizes or regulates.
ORDERING
ppr. Regulating; systemizing; commanding; disposing.
ORDERING
n.Disposition; distribution. 1 Chronicles 24:19.
ORDERLESS
a.Without regularity; disorderly; out of rule.
ORDERLINESS
n.[from orderly. ] 1. Regularity; a state of being methodical.
2. The state of being orderly.
ORDERLY
a. 1. Methodical; regular
2. Observant of order or method.
3. Well regulated; performed in good order; not tumultuous; as an orderly march.
4. According to established method.
5. Not unruly; not inclined to break from inclosures; peaceable. We say, cattle are orderly.
Orderly book, in military affairs, a book for every company, in which the sergeants write general and regimental orders.
Orderly sergeant, a military officer who attends on a superior officer.
ORDERLY
adv. Methodically; according to due order; regularly; according to rule.
Webster's 1913 Dictionary
ORDER
Or "der, n. Etym: [OE. ordre, F. ordre, fr. L. ordo, ordinis. Cf. Ordain, Ordinal. ]
1. Regular arrangement; any methodical or established succession or harmonious relation; method; system; as: (a ) Of material things, like the books in a library. (b ) Of intellectual notions or ideas, like the topics of a discource.(c ) Of periods of time or occurrences, and the like. The side chambers were. .. thirty in order. Ezek. xli. 6. Bright-harnessed angels sit in order serviceable. Milton. Good order is the foundation of all good things. Burke.
2. Right arrangement; a normal, correct, or fit condition; as, the house is in order; the machinery is out of order. Locke.
3. The customary mode of procedure; established system, as in the conduct of debates or the transaction of business; usage; custom; fashion. Dantiel. And, pregnant with his grander thought, Brought the old order into doubt. Emerson.
4. Conformity with law or decorum; freedom from disturbance; general tranquillity; public quiet; as, to preserve order in a community or an assembly.
5. That which prescribes a method of procedure; a rule or regulation made by competent authority; as, the rules and orders of the senate. The church hath authority to establish that for an order at one time which at another time it may abolish. Hooker.
6. A command; a mandate; a precept; a direction. Upon this new fright, an order was made by both houses for disarming all the papists in England. Clarendon.
7. Hence: A commission to purchase, sell, or supply goods; a direction, in writing, to pay money, to furnish supplies, to admit to a building, a place of entertainment, or the like; as, orders for blankets are large. In those days were pit orders -- beshrew the uncomfortable manager who abolished them. Lamb.
8. A number of things or persons arranged in a fixed or suitable place, or relative position; a rank; a row; a grade; especially, a rank or class in society; a group or division of men in the same social or other position; also, a distinct character, kind, or sort; as, the higher or lower orders of society; talent of a high order. They are in equal order to their several ends. Jer. Taylor. Various orders various ensigns bear. Granville. Which, to his order of mind, must have seemed little short of crime. Hawthorne.
9. A body of persons having some common honorary distinction or rule of obligation; esp. , a body of religious persons or aggregate of convents living under a common rule; as, the Order of the Bath; the Franciscan order. Find a barefoot brother out, One of our order, to associate me. Shak. The venerable order of the Knights Templars. Sir W. Scott.
1 . An ecclesiastical grade or rank, as of deacon, priest, or bishop; the office of the Christian ministry; -- often used in the plural; as, to take orders, or to take holy orders, that is, to enter some grade of the ministry.
11. (Arch. )
Defn: The disposition of a column and its component parts, and of the entablature resting upon it, in classical architecture; hence (as the column and entablature are the characteristic features of classical architecture ) a style or manner of architectural designing.
Note: The Greeks used three different orders, easy to distinguish, Doric, Ionic, and Corinthian. The Romans added the Tuscan, and changed the Doric so that it is hardly recognizable, and also used a modified Corinthian called Composite. The Renaissance writers on architecture recognized five orders as orthodox or classical, -- Doric (the Roman sort ), Ionic, Tuscan, Corinthian, and Composite. See Illust. of Capital.
12. (Nat. Hist. )
Defn: An assemblage of genera having certain important characters in common; as, the Carnivora and Insectivora are orders of Mammalia.
Note: The Linnæan artificial orders of plants rested mainly on identity in the numer of pistils, or agreement in some one character. Natural orders are groups of genera agreeing in the fundamental plan of their flowers and fruit. A natural order is usually (in botany )equivalent to a family, and may include several tribes.
13. (Rhet.)
Defn: The placing of words and members in a sentence in such a manner as to contribute to force and beauty or clearness of expression.
14. (Math. )
Defn: Rank; degree; thus, the order of a curve or surface is the same as the degree of its equation. Artificial order or system. See Artificial classification, under Artificial, and Note to def. 12 above. -- Close order (Mil. ), the arrangement of the ranks with a distance of about half a pace between them; with a distance of about three yards the ranks are in Ant: open order. -- The four Orders, The Orders four, the four orders of mendicant friars. See Friar. Chaucer. -- General orders (Mil. ), orders issued which concern the whole command, or the troops generally, in distinction from special orders. -- Holy orders. (a ) (Eccl.) The different grades of the Christian ministry; ordination to the ministry. See def. 1 above. (b ) (R. C. Ch. ) A sacrament for the purpose of conferring a special grace on those ordained. -- In order to, for the purpose of; to the end; as means to. The best knowledge is that which is of greatest use in order to our eternal happiness. Tillotson. -- Minor orders (R. C. Ch. ), orders beneath the diaconate in sacramental dignity, as acolyte, exorcist, reader, doorkeeper. -- Money order. See under Money. -- Natural order. (Bot. ) See def. 12, Note. -- Order book. (a ) A merchant's book in which orders are entered. (b ) (Mil. ) A book kept at headquarters, in which all orders are recorded for the information of officers and men. (c ) A book in the House of Commons in which proposed orders must be entered. [Eng. ] -- Order in Council, a royal order issed with and by the advice of the Privy Council. [Great Britain ] -- Order of battle (Mil. ), the particular disposition given to the troops of an army on the field of battle. -- Order of the day, in legislative bodies, the special business appointed for a specified day. -- Order of a differential equation (Math. ), the greatest index of differentiation in the equation. -- Sailing orders (Naut. ), the final instructions given to the commander of a ship of war before a cruise. -- Sealed orders, orders sealed, and not to be opended until a certain time, or arrival at a certain place, as after a ship is at sea. -- Standing order. (a ) A continuing regulation for the conduct of parliamentary business. (b ) (Mil. ) An order not subject to change by an officer temporarily in command. -- To give order, to give command or directions. Shak. -- To take order for, to take charge of; to make arrangements concerning. Whiles I take order for mine own affairs. Shak.
Syn. -- Arrangement; management. See Direction.
ORDER
Or "der, v. t. [imp. & p. p. Ordered; p pr. & vb. n. Ordering. ] Etym: [From Order, n.]
1. To put in order; to reduce to a methodical arrangement; to arrange in a series, or with reference to an end. Hence, to regulate; to dispose; to direct; to rule. To him that ordereth his conversation aright. Ps. 1. 23.Warriors old with ordered spear and shield. Milton.
2. To give an order to; to command; as, to order troops to advance.
3. To give an order for; to secure by an order; as, to order a carriage; to order groceries.
4. (Eccl.)
Defn: To admit to holy orders; to ordain; to receive into the ranks of the ministry. These ordered folk be especially titled to God. Chaucer. Persons presented to be ordered deacons. Bk. of Com. Prayer. Order arms (Mil. ), the command at which a rifle is brought to a position with its but resting on the ground; also, the position taken at such a command.
ORDER
ORDER Or "der, v. i.
Defn: To give orders; to issue commands.
ORDERABLE
ORDERABLE Or "der *a *ble, a.
Defn: Capable of being ordered; tractable. [R.] Being very orderable in all his sickness. Fuller.
ORDERER
ORDERER Or "der *er, n.
1. One who puts in order, arranges, methodizes, or regulates.
2. One who gives orders.
ORDERING
ORDERING Or "der *ing, n.
Defn: Disposition; distribution; management. South.
ORDERLESS
ORDERLESS Or "der *less, a.
Defn: Being without order or regularity; disorderly; out of rule.
ORDERLINESS
ORDERLINESS Or "der *li *ness, n.
Defn: The state or quality of being orderly.
ORDERLY
ORDERLY Or "der *ly, a.
1. Conformed to order; in order; regular; as, an orderly course or plan. Milton.
2. Observant of order, authority, or rule; hence, obedient; quiet; peaceable; not unruly; as, orderly children; an orderly community.
3. Performed in good or established order; well-regulated. "An orderly. .. march. " Clarendon.
4. Being on duty; keeping order; conveying orders. "Aids-de-camp and orderly men. " Sir W. Scott. Orderly book (Mil. ), a book for every company, in which the general and regimental orders are recorded. -- Orderly officer, the officer of the day, or that officer of a corps or regiment whose turn it is to supervise for the day the arrangements for food, cleanliness, etc. Farrow. -- Orderly room. (a ) The court of the commanding officer, where charges against the men of the regiment are tried. (b ) The office of the commanding officer, usually in the barracks, whence orders emanate. Farrow. -- Orderly sergeant, the first sergeant of a company.
ORDERLY
ORDERLY Or "der *ly, adv.
Defn: According to due order; regularly; methodically; duly. You are blunt; go to it orderly. Shak.
ORDERLY
Or "der *ly, n.; pl. Orderlies (.
1. (Mil. )
Defn: A noncommissioned officer or soldier who attends a superior officer to carry his orders, or to render other service. Orderlies were appointed to watch the palace. Macaulay.
2. A street sweeper. [Eng. ] Mayhew.
New American Oxford Dictionary
order
or der |ˈôrdər ˈɔrdər | ▶noun 1 the arrangement or disposition of people or things in relation to each other according to a particular sequence, pattern, or method: I filed the cards in alphabetical order. • a state in which everything is in its correct or appropriate place: she tried to put her shattered thoughts into some semblance of order. • a state in which the laws and rules regulating the public behavior of members of a community are observed and authority is obeyed: the army was deployed to keep order. • [ with adj. ] the overall state or condition of something: the house had just been vacated and was in good order. • a particular social, political, or economic system: if only the peasantry would rise up against the established order | the social order of Britain. • the prescribed or established procedure followed by a meeting, legislative assembly, debate, or court of law: the meeting was called to order . • a stated form of liturgical service, or of administration of a rite or ceremony, prescribed by ecclesiastical authority. 2 an authoritative command, direction, or instruction: he was not going to take orders from a mere administrator | [ with infinitive ] : the skipper gave the order to abandon ship. • an oral or written request for something to be made, supplied, or served: the company has won an order for six tankers. • a thing made, supplied, or served as a result of such a request: orders will be delivered the next business day. • a written direction of a court or judge: a judge's order forbidding the reporting of evidence. • a written direction to pay money or deliver property. 3 (often orders ) a social class: the upper social orders. • Biology a principal taxonomic category that ranks below class and above family. • a grade or rank in the Christian ministry, esp. that of bishop, priest, or deacon. • (orders ) the rank or position of a member of the clergy or an ordained minister of a church: he took priest's orders. See also holy orders. • Theology any of the nine grades of angelic beings in the celestial hierarchy. 4 (also Order ) a society of monks, priests, nuns, etc. , living according to certain religious and social regulations and discipline and at least some of whose members take solemn vows: the Franciscan Order. • historical a society of knights bound by a common rule of life and having a combined military and monastic character. • an institution founded by a monarch for the purpose of conferring an honor or honors for merit on those appointed to it. • the insignia worn by members of such an institution. • a Masonic or similar fraternal organization. 5 [ in sing. ] used to describe the quality, nature, or importance of something: with musical talent of this order, von Karajan would have been a phenomenon in any age. 6 any of the five classical styles of architecture (Doric, Ionic, Corinthian, Tuscan, and Composite ) based on the proportions of columns, amount of decoration, etc. • any style or mode of architecture subject to uniform established proportions. 7 [ with modifier ] Military equipment or uniform for a specified purpose or of a specified type: drill order. • (the order ) the position in which a rifle is held after ordering arms. See order arms below. 8 Mathematics the degree of complexity of an equation, expression, etc. , as denoted by an ordinal number. • the number of differentiations required to reach the highest derivative in a differential equation. • the number of elements in a finite group. • the number of rows or columns in a square matrix. ▶verb 1 [ reporting verb ] give an authoritative direction or instruction to do something: [ with obj. and infinitive ] : she ordered me to leave | [ with direct speech ] : “Stop frowning, ” he ordered | [ with clause ] : the court ordered that the case should be heard at the end of August | [ with obj. ] : her father ordered her back home | the judge ordered a retrial. • [ with obj. ] (order someone around /about ) continually tell someone in an overbearing way what to do. • [ with obj. and complement ] command (something ) to be done or (someone ) to be treated in a particular way: he ordered the anchor dropped. 2 [ with obj. ] request (something ) to be made, supplied, or served: my friend ordered the tickets last week | [ with two objs. ] : I asked the security guard to order me a taxi | [ no obj. ] : Are you ready to order, sir? 3 [ with obj. ] arrange (something ) in a methodical or appropriate way: all entries are ordered by date | [ as adj. in combination ] (-ordered ) : her normally well-ordered life. PHRASES by order of according to directions given by the proper authority: he was released from prison by order of the court. in order 1 according to a particular sequence. 2 in the correct condition for operation or use. 3 in accordance with the rules of procedure at a meeting, legislative assembly, etc. • appropriate in the circumstances: a little bit of flattery was now in order. in order for so that: employees must be committed to the change in order for it to succeed. in order that with the intention; so that: she used her mother's kitchen in order that the turkey might be properly cooked. in order to as a means to: he slouched into his seat in order to avoid drawing attention to himself. of the order of 1 approximately: sales increases are of the order of 20 \%. 2 Mathematics having the order of magnitude specified by. on order (of goods ) requested but not yet received from the supplier or manufacturer. on the order of 1 another term for of the order of above. 2 along the lines of; similar to: singers on the order of Janis Joplin. Order! a call for silence or the observance of prescribed procedures by someone in charge of a trial, legislative assembly, etc. order arms Military hold a rifle with its butt on the ground close to one's right side. order of battle the units, formations, and equipment of a military force. orders are orders commands must be obeyed, however much one may disagree with them. out of order 1 (of an electrical or mechanical device ) not working properly or at all. 2 not in the correct sequence. 3 not according to the rules of a meeting, legislative assembly, etc. • informal (of a person or their behavior ) unacceptable or wrong: he's getting away with things that are out of order. to order according to a customer's specific request or requirements: the sweaters are knitted to order. DERIVATIVES or der er noun ORIGIN Middle English: from Old French ordre, from Latin ordo, ordin- ‘row, series, rank. ’
order book
order book ▶noun chiefly Brit. a book in which orders are entered as they are received by a business, especially regarded as a measure of the organization's success.
ordered pair
or dered pair ▶noun Mathematics a pair of elements a, b having the property that ( a, b ) = (u, v ) if and only if a = u, b = v.
order form
order form ▶noun a printed form on which a customer writes the details of a product or service they wish to order.
Order in Council
Order in Council ▶noun Brit. a sovereign's order on an administrative matter, given on the advice of the Privy Council.
orderly
or der ly |ˈôrdərlē ˈɔrdərli | ▶adjective neatly and methodically arranged: an orderly arrangement of objects. • (of a person or group ) well behaved; disciplined. ▶noun ( pl. orderlies ) 1 an attendant in a hospital responsible for the nonmedical care of patients and the maintenance of order and cleanliness. 2 a soldier who carries out orders or performs minor tasks for an officer. DERIVATIVES or der li ness noun
orderly book
or |der ¦ly book ▶noun Brit. Military a regimental or company book in which orders are entered.
orderly officer
or |der ¦ly of ¦fi |cer ▶noun Brit. Military the officer who is in charge of the security and administration of a unit or establishment for a day at a time.
orderly room
or der ly room ▶noun Military the room used for regimental or company business.
Order of Australia
Order of Aus |tra ¦lia an order instituted in 1975 to honour Australians for outstanding achievement and divided into four classes: Companion (AC ), Officer (AO ), Member (AM ), and Medal of the Order of Australia (OAM ). A fifth class of Knight or Dame, above Companion, was abolished in 1986.
order of business
or der of busi ness ▶noun ( pl. orders of business ) a task assigned or a matter to be addressed: the first order of business is learning who the hitters are.
Order of Canada
Order of Can ¦ada an order instituted in 1967 to honour Canadians for outstanding achievement and divided into three classes: Companion (CC ), Officer (OC ), and Member (CM ).
order of magnitude
or der of mag ni tude |ˈɔrdər əv | ▶noun a class in a system of classification determined by size, each class being a number of times (usually ten ) greater or smaller than the one before: values might be compared by order of magnitude, a staple in making ballpark estimates. • relative size, quantity, quality, etc.: the new problems were of a different order of magnitude. • the arrangement of a number of items determined by their relative size: the items are arranged in ascending order of magnitude.
Order of Merit
Order of Merit (in the UK ) an order founded in 1902, for distinguished achievement, with membership limited to twenty-four people.
Order of St Michael and St George
Order of St Mi ¦chael and St George (in the UK ) an order of knighthood instituted in 1818, divided into three classes: Knight or Dame Grand Cross of the Order of St Michael and St George (GCMG ), Knight or Dame Commander (KCMG /DCMG ), and Companion (CMG ).
Order of the Bath
Order of the Bath (in the UK ) an order of knighthood, so called from the ceremonial bath which originally preceded installation. It has four classes of membership, which are: Knight or Dame Grand Cross of the Order of the Bath (GCB ), Knight or Dame Commander (KCB /DCB ), and Companion (CB ).
Order of the British Empire
Order of the Brit |ish Empire (in the UK ) an order of knighthood instituted in 1917 and divided into five classes, each with military and civilian divisions. The classes are: Knight or Dame Grand Cross of the Order of the British Empire (GBE ), Knight or Dame Commander (KBE /DBE ), Commander (CBE ), Officer (OBE ), and Member (MBE ). The two highest classes entail the awarding of a knighthood.
order of the day
or der of the day ▶noun (the order of the day ) 1 the prevailing state of things: confusion would seem to be the order of the day. 2 something that is required or recommended: on Sundays, a black suit was the order of the day. 3 a program or agenda.
Order of the Garter
Or der of the Gar ter the highest order of English knighthood, founded by Edward III c. 1344. According to tradition, the garter was that of the Countess of Salisbury, which the king placed on his own leg after it fell off while she was dancing with him. The king's comment to those present, “Honi soit qui mal y pense ” (shame be to him who thinks evil of it ), was adopted as the motto of the order.
Order of the Thistle
Order of the Thistle a Scottish order of knighthood instituted in 1687 by James II.
Order Paper
Order Paper ▶noun Brit. & Canadian a paper on which the day's business for a legislative assembly is entered. PHRASES die on the Order Paper Canadian (of a bill ) fail to be voted on before the end of a legislative session.
Oxford Dictionary
order
order |ˈɔːdə | ▶noun 1 [ mass noun ] the arrangement or disposition of people or things in relation to each other according to a particular sequence, pattern, or method: I filed the cards in alphabetical order. • a state in which everything is in its correct or appropriate place: she tried to put her shattered thoughts into some semblance of order. • a state in which the laws and rules regulating public behaviour are observed and authority is obeyed: the army was deployed to keep order. • the prescribed or established procedure followed by a meeting, legislative assembly, debate, or court of law: the meeting was called to order . • a stated form of liturgical service, or of administration of a rite, prescribed by ecclesiastical authority. 2 an authoritative command or instruction: he was not going to take orders from a mere administrator | [ with infinitive ] : the skipper gave the order to abandon ship. • a verbal or written request for something to be made, supplied, or served: the firm has won an order for six tankers. • a thing made, supplied, or served as a result of an order: he would deliver special orders for the Sunday dinner. • a written direction of a court or judge: she was admitted to hospital under a guardianship order. • a written direction to pay money or deliver property. 3 a particular social, political, or economic system: they were dedicated to overthrowing the established order. • (often orders ) a social class: the upper social orders. • a rank in the Christian ministry, especially that of bishop, priest, or deacon. • (orders ) the rank of a member of the clergy or an ordained minister of the Church: he took priest's orders. See also holy orders. • Theology any of the nine grades of angelic beings in the celestial hierarchy as formulated by Pseudo-Dionysius. 4 (also Order ) a society of monks, nuns, or friars living under the same religious, moral, and social regulations and discipline: the Franciscan Order. • historical a society of knights bound by a common rule of life and having a combined military and monastic character. • an institution founded by a monarch along the lines of a medieval crusading monastic order for the purpose of honouring meritorious conduct. • the insignia worn by members of an order of honour or merit. • a Masonic or similar fraternity. 5 [ in sing. ] the quality or nature of something: poetry of the highest order . • [ with adj. ] the overall state or condition of something: the house had only just been vacated and was in good order. 6 Biology a principal taxonomic category that ranks below class and above family. 7 any of the five classical styles of architecture (Doric, Ionic, Corinthian, Tuscan, and Composite ) based on the proportions of columns and the style of their decoration. • any style of architecture subject to uniform established proportions. 8 [ mass noun ] [ with modifier ] Military equipment or uniform for a specified purpose or of a specified type: the platoon changed from drill order into PT kit. • (the order ) the position in which a rifle is held after ordering arms. See order arms below. 9 Mathematics the degree of complexity of an equation, expression, etc. , as denoted by an ordinal number. • the number of differentiations required to reach the highest derivative in a differential equation. • the number of elements in a finite group. • the number of rows or columns in a square matrix. ▶verb 1 [ reporting verb ] give an authoritative instruction to do something: [ with obj. and infinitive ] : she ordered me to leave | [ with direct speech ] : ‘Stop frowning, ’ he ordered | [ with clause ] : he ordered that the ship be abandoned | [ with obj. ] : the judge ordered a retrial. • [ with obj. ] (order someone about /around ) continually tell someone to do things in an overbearing way. • [ with obj. and complement ] N. Amer. command (something ) to be done or (someone ) to be treated in a particular way: he ordered the anchor dropped. 2 [ with obj. ] request (something ) to be made, supplied, or served: my mate ordered the tickets last week | [ with two objs ] : I asked the security guard to order me a taxi | [ no obj. ] : are you ready to order, sir? 3 [ with obj. ] arrange (something ) in a methodical way: all entries are ordered by date | (as adj., in combination -ordered ) : her normally well-ordered life. PHRASES by order according to directions given by the proper authority. in order 1 according to a particular sequence. 2 in the correct condition for operation or use. 3 in accordance with the rules of procedure at a meeting, legislative assembly, etc. • appropriate in the circumstances: a little bit of flattery was now in order. in order for (or that ) so that: staff must be committed to the change in order for it to succeed. in order to do something with the purpose of doing something: he slouched into his seat in order to avoid drawing attention to himself. of the order of chiefly Brit. 1 approximately: sales increases are of the order of 20 \%. 2 Mathematics having the order of magnitude specified by. on order (of goods ) requested but not yet received from the supplier or manufacturer. on the order of chiefly N. Amer. 1 approximately. 2 similar to: singers on the order of Janis Joplin. Order! (or Order! Order! ) a call for silence or the observance of the prescribed procedures by someone in charge of a meeting, legislative assembly, etc. order arms Military hold a rifle with its butt on the ground close to one's right side. order of battle the units, formations, and equipment of a military force. the order of the day 1 the prevailing custom or state of affairs: on Sundays, a black suit was the order of the day | confusion would seem to be the order of the day. 2 (in a legislature ) the business to be considered on a particular day. orders are orders commands must be obeyed, however much one may disagree with them. order to view Brit. an estate agent's request to an occupier to allow inspection of their premises by a client. out of order 1 (of a device ) not working properly or at all. 2 not in the correct sequence. 3 not according to the rules of a meeting, legislative assembly, etc. • Brit. informal (of a person or their behaviour ) unacceptable or wrong: Chris was well out of order. to order according to a customer's particular requirements: the jumpers are knitted to order. ORIGIN Middle English: from Old French ordre, from Latin ordo, ordin- ‘row, series, rank ’.
order book
order book ▶noun chiefly Brit. a book in which orders are entered as they are received by a business, especially regarded as a measure of the organization's success.
ordered pair
or ¦dered pair ▶noun Mathematics a pair of elements a, b having the property that ( a, b ) = (u, v ) if and only if a = u, b = v.
order form
order form ▶noun a printed form on which a customer writes the details of a product or service they wish to order.
Order in Council
Order in Council ▶noun Brit. a sovereign's order on an administrative matter, given on the advice of the Privy Council.
orderly
or |der ¦ly |ˈɔːd (ə )li | ▶adjective 1 neatly and methodically arranged: an orderly arrangement of objects. • (of a person or group ) well behaved. 2 [ attrib. ] Military charged with the conveyance or execution of orders: the orderly sergeant. ▶noun ( pl. orderlies ) 1 an attendant in a hospital responsible for the non-medical care of patients and the maintenance of order and cleanliness. 2 a soldier who carries orders or performs minor tasks for an officer. DERIVATIVES orderliness noun
orderly book
or |der ¦ly book ▶noun Brit. Military a regimental or company book in which orders are entered.
orderly officer
or |der ¦ly of ¦fi |cer ▶noun Brit. Military the officer who is in charge of the security and administration of a unit or establishment for a day at a time.
orderly room
or |der ¦ly room ▶noun Military the room in a barracks used for regimental or company business.
Order of Australia
Order of Aus |tra ¦lia an order instituted in 1975 to honour Australians for outstanding achievement and divided into four classes: Companion (AC ), Officer (AO ), Member (AM ), and Medal of the Order of Australia (OAM ). A fifth class of Knight or Dame, above Companion, was abolished in 1986.
order of business
or der of busi ness ▶noun ( pl. orders of business ) a task assigned or a matter to be addressed: the first order of business is learning who the hitters are.
Order of Canada
Order of Can ¦ada an order instituted in 1967 to honour Canadians for outstanding achievement and divided into three classes: Companion (CC ), Officer (OC ), and Member (CM ).
order of magnitude
order of mag ¦ni |tude ▶noun a class in a system of classification determined by size, typically in powers of ten. • size or quantity: the new problems were of a different order of magnitude.
Order of Merit
Order of Merit (in the UK ) an order founded in 1902, for distinguished achievement, with membership limited to twenty-four people.
Order of St Michael and St George
Order of St Mi ¦chael and St George (in the UK ) an order of knighthood instituted in 1818, divided into three classes: Knight or Dame Grand Cross of the Order of St Michael and St George (GCMG ), Knight or Dame Commander (KCMG /DCMG ), and Companion (CMG ).
Order of the Bath
Order of the Bath (in the UK ) an order of knighthood, so called from the ceremonial bath which originally preceded installation. It has four classes of membership, which are: Knight or Dame Grand Cross of the Order of the Bath (GCB ), Knight or Dame Commander (KCB /DCB ), and Companion (CB ).
Order of the British Empire
Order of the Brit |ish Empire (in the UK ) an order of knighthood instituted in 1917 and divided into five classes, each with military and civilian divisions. The classes are: Knight or Dame Grand Cross of the Order of the British Empire (GBE ), Knight or Dame Commander (KBE /DBE ), Commander (CBE ), Officer (OBE ), and Member (MBE ). The two highest classes entail the awarding of a knighthood.
order of the day
or der of the day ▶noun (the order of the day ) 1 the prevailing state of things: confusion would seem to be the order of the day. 2 something that is required or recommended: on Sundays, a black suit was the order of the day. 3 a program or agenda.
Order of the Garter
Order of the Garter the highest order of English knighthood, founded by Edward III c. 1344. According to tradition, the garter was that of the Countess of Salisbury, which the king placed on his own leg after it fell off while she was dancing with him. The king's comment to those present, ‘Honi soit qui mal y pense ’ (shame be to him who thinks evil of it ), was adopted as the motto of the order.
Order of the Thistle
Order of the Thistle a Scottish order of knighthood instituted in 1687 by James II.
Order Paper
Order Paper ▶noun Brit. & Canadian a paper on which the day's business for a legislative assembly is entered. PHRASES die on the Order Paper Canadian (of a bill ) fail to be voted on before the end of a legislative session.
American Oxford Thesaurus
order
order noun 1 alphabetical order: sequence, arrangement, organization, disposition, system, series, succession; grouping, classification, categorization, codification, systematization. 2 his tidy desk demonstrates his sense of order: tidiness, neatness, orderliness, organization, method, system; symmetry, uniformity, regularity; routine. ANTONYMS chaos, disarray. 3 the police were needed to keep order: peace, control, law (and order ), lawfulness, discipline, calm, (peace and ) quiet, peacefulness, peaceableness. 4 the equipment was in good order: condition, state, repair, shape. 5 I had to obey her orders: command, instruction, directive, direction, decree, edict, injunction, mandate, dictate, commandment, rescript; law, rule, regulation, diktat; demand, bidding, requirement, stipulation; informal say-so; formal ordinance; literary behest. ANTONYMS suggestion. 6 the company has won the order: commission, contract, purchase order, request, requisition; booking, reservation. ANTONYMS chaos. 7 the lower orders of society: class, level, rank, grade, degree, position, category; dated station. 8 the established social order: (class ) system, hierarchy, pecking order, grading, ranking, scale. 9 the higher orders of insects: taxonomic group, class, family, species, breed; taxon. 10 a religious order: community, brotherhood, sisterhood, organization, association, society, fellowship, fraternity, confraternity, congregation, sodality, lodge, guild, league, union, club; sect. 11 skills of a very high order: type, kind, sort, nature, variety; quality, caliber, standard. ▶verb 1 he ordered me to return: instruct, command, direct, enjoin, tell, require, charge; formal adjure; literary bid. 2 the judge ordered that their assets be confiscated: decree, ordain, rule, legislate, dictate, prescribe. 3 you can order your tickets by phone: request, apply for, place an order for; book, reserve; formal bespeak. 4 the messages are ordered chronologically: organize, put in order, arrange, sort out, marshal, dispose, lay out; group, classify, categorize, catalog, codify, systematize, systemize. PHRASES in order 1 list the dates in order: in sequence, in series. 2 he found everything in order: tidy, neat, orderly, straight, trim, shipshape, in apple-pie order; in position, in place. 3 I think it's in order for me to take the credit: appropriate, fitting, suitable, acceptable, (all ) right, permissible, permitted, allowable; informal okay. order about /around what makes him think he can just waltz in and start ordering us about? tell what to do, give orders to, dictate to; lay down the law to; informal boss around, push around. out of order the elevator's out of order: not working, not in working order, not functioning, broken, broken-down, out of service, out of commission, faulty, defective, inoperative; down; informal conked out, bust, busted, (gone ) kaput, on the fritz, on the blink, out of whack.
orderly
orderly adjective 1 an orderly room: neat, tidy, well-ordered, in order, trim, in apple-pie order, spick and span, shipshape. ANTONYMS untidy, messy. 2 the orderly presentation of information: (well ) organized, efficient, methodical, systematic, meticulous, punctilious; coherent, structured, logical, well-planned, well regulated, systematized. ANTONYMS disorganized. 3 the crowd was orderly: well-behaved, law-abiding, disciplined, peaceful, peaceable, nonviolent. ANTONYMS unruly.
Oxford Thesaurus
order
order noun 1 the list is in alphabetical order: sequence, arrangement, organization, disposition, structure, system, series, succession; grouping, classification, categorization, codification, systematization, disposal, form; layout, array, set-up, line-up. 2 I tried to restore the room to some semblance of order: tidiness, neatness, orderliness, trimness, harmony, apple-pie order. ANTONYMS chaos, disarray, untidiness. 3 6,000 police were needed to keep order: peace, control, lawful behaviour, law and order, law, lawfulness, discipline, calm, quiet, peace and quiet, quietness, peacefulness, peaceableness, tranquillity, serenity. ANTONYMS disorder. 4 the idea appealed to his sense of order: orderliness, organization, method, system; symmetry, pattern, uniformity, regularity, routine. 5 all the equipment was in good order: condition, state, repair, shape, situation. 6 I had no choice but to obey his orders: command, instruction, directive, direction, decree, edict, injunction, mandate, dictate, commandment; law, rule, regulation, ordinance, statute, fiat, diktat; demand, bidding, requirement, stipulation; summons, writ, warrant; in Spanish-speaking countries pronunciamento; in Tsarist Russia ukase; informal say-so; literary behest; rare rescript. 7 winning the order would mean about £60 million worth of work for the company: commission, purchase order, request, requisition, demand, call; booking, reservation, application. 8 the upper and lower orders of society: class, level, rank, caste, grade, degree, position, station, category. 9 the established social order: system, class system, hierarchy, pecking order, grouping, grading, ranking, scale. 10 the higher orders of insects: taxonomic group, class, subclass, family, species, breed; technical taxon. 11 the head of a religious order: community, brotherhood, sisterhood. 12 the Independent Orange Order: organization, association, society, fellowship, body, fraternity, confraternity, sorority, brotherhood, sisterhood, lodge, guild, league, union, club; denomination, sect; rare sodality. 13 diplomatic skills of a very high order: type, kind, sort, nature, variety, ilk, genre, cast, style, brand, vintage; quality, calibre, standard. PHRASES in order 1 list the points you intend to cover and put them in order: in sequence, in alphabetical order, in numerical order, in order of priority, in order of merit, in order of seniority. 2 when he switched on the light and went in, he found everything in order: tidy, neat, neat and tidy, orderly, straight, trim, shipshape (and Bristol fashion ), in apple-pie order, spick and span; in position, in place. 3 I think it's in order for me to take the credit, don't you? appropriate, fitting, suitable, right, correct, proper; acceptable, all right, permissible, permitted, allowable; French comme il faut; informal okay. of the order of the reduction was of the order of 11 percent: roughly, approximately, about, around, just about, round about, or so, or thereabouts, more or less, in the neighbourhood of, in the region of, in the area of, in the vicinity of, something like, or thereabouts, give or take (a few ), in round numbers, rounded up /down; near to, close to, nearly, not far off, almost, approaching; Brit. getting on for; Latin circa; informal pushing, as near as dammit; N. Amer. informal in the ballpark of; archaic nigh. ANTONYMS precisely. the order of the day spectacle is the order of the day for many younger artists: predominant, prevalent, current, customary, established, common, widespread, preponderant, in force, in effect, popular; informal the in thing. out of order 1 the lift's out of order: not working, not in working order, not functioning, broken, broken-down, out of service, out of commission, acting up, unserviceable, faulty, defective, non-functional, inoperative, in disrepair; down; informal conked out, bust, (gone ) kaput, gone phut, on the blink, gone haywire, shot; Brit. informal knackered, jiggered, wonky; N. Amer. informal on the fritz, out of whack; Brit. vulgar slang buggered. 2 he wanted to sack her on the spot —that's really out of order: unacceptable, unfair, unjust, unjustified, uncalled for, below the belt, out of turn, not done, unreasonable, unwarranted, unnecessary, wrong, beyond the pale, improper, irregular; informal not on, a bit much; Brit. informal a bit thick, off, not cricket; Austral. /NZ informal over the fence. ▶verb 1 he ordered me to return at once: instruct, command, direct, enjoin, give the order to, give the command to, tell, require, charge, adjure; literary bid. 2 Judge Butler ordered that assets worth £23,000 be confiscated under the Drugs Trafficking Act: decree, ordain, rule, legislate, lay down, dictate, prescribe, pronounce, determine; rare enact. 3 you can order your tickets by phone: request, apply for, send away /off for, write off for, put in an order for, place an order for, requisition; book, reserve; commission, contract for; rare bespeak. 4 Derek struggled to order his thoughts | the messages are ordered alphabetically: organize, put in order, set in order, arrange, sort out, straighten out, marshal, dispose, lay out, regulate; group, classify, categorize, catalogue, codify, systematize, systemize, tabulate; Medicine triage; rare methodize. PHRASES order someone about /around tell someone what to do, give orders to, boss about /around, bully, lord it over, dictate to, ride roughshod over, dominate, domineer, browbeat; throw one's weight about /around, lay down the law; informal push about /around.
orderly
orderly adjective 1 an orderly room: neat, tidy, well ordered, in order, trim, in apple-pie order, as neat as a new pin, spick and span, well kept, straight; Brit. informal, dated shipshape (and Bristol fashion ). ANTONYMS disorderly, untidy, chaotic, messy. 2 Robert had been an orderly man | the orderly presentation of information: well organized, organized, efficient, businesslike, methodical, systematic, careful, meticulous, punctilious; coherent, structured, logical, well planned, well regulated, systematized; French rangé. ANTONYMS disorganized. 3 the crowd was quiet and orderly: well behaved, law-abiding, disciplined, peaceful, peaceable, non-violent, controlled, restrained, civilized, well mannered, polite, courteous, decorous; archaic ruly. ANTONYMS disorderly, unruly.
Duden Dictionary
Order
Or der Substantiv, feminin , die |O rder |die Order; Genitiv: der Order, Plural: die Orders und Ordern französisch ordre < lateinisch ordo, Orden 1 [militärischer, dienstlicher ] Befehl; Anweisung Order geben, bekommen, haben, den Abmarsch vorzubereiten 2 Plural: Orders wohl unter Einfluss von gleichbedeutend englisch order Kaufmannssprache, Börsenwesen Bestellung, Auftrag telegrafisch erteilte Orders
Orderbuch
Or der buch Substantiv, Neutrum Kaufmannssprache, Börsenwesen , das |O rderbuch |Buch, in dem laufende Aufträge verzeichnet werden; Auftragsbuch
Ordereingang
Or der ein gang Substantiv, maskulin Kaufmannssprache , der |O rdereingang | Eingang 4a von Aufträgen, Bestellungen
ordern
or dern schwaches Verb Kaufmannssprache |o rdern |schwaches Verb; Perfektbildung mit »hat « wohl unter Einfluss von gleichbedeutend englisch to order einer Firma o. Ä. einen Auftrag über eine bestimmte [größere ] Menge, Anzahl von etwas erteilen; (eine Ware ) bestellen diese Artikel wurden vom Handel zügig geordert | auch ohne Akkusativ-Objekt ordern Sie jetzt!
Orderpapier
Or der pa pier Substantiv, Neutrum Bankwesen , das |O rderpapier |Wertpapier, in dem der Berechtigte einen andern als Berechtigten benennt
Orderscheck
Or der scheck Substantiv, maskulin Wirtschaft , der |O rderscheck |der Orderscheck; Genitiv: des Orderschecks, Plural: die Orderschecks lateinisch-französisch ; englisch Scheck, der durch Indossament übertragen werden kann
Sanseido Wisdom Dictionary
order
or der /ɔ́ː r də r /〖「階級 」>「順序 」>「命令 注文 」〗(形 )orderly 名詞 複 ~s /-z /1 U 順番 , オーダー, 順序 (sequence ); 〘文法 〙語順 ▸ Messages are listed in chronological [alphabetical, numerical ] order .伝言は時間 [アルファベット, 数字 ]順に並べられている ▸ in the right order 正しい順番に [で ]▸ list five points in order of importance 重要な順に5つのポイントを挙げる ▸ in the reverse order 反対の順に ▸ in ascending [descending ] order of cost 額の少ない [多い ]順に .2 C a. (品物の )注文 , 注文品 ▸ I'd like to place an order for a bicycle I've seen in your catalogue .カタログで見た自転車を注文したいんですが ▸ Orders flooded in .注文が殺到した .b. (料理の )注文, オーダー ; 注文した飲食物 (!レストランなどで ) ▸ May I take your order , ma'am [sir ]?ご注文をうかがってよろしいでしょうか ▸ The waiter returned with my order .ウエイターが私の料理を持って戻ってきた ▸ A large Coke and two orders of fries, please .コーラのLとポテトフライ2つください ▸ I'm afraid the pancakes will be a side order .申しわけございませんが, ホットケーキは別注文となります ▸ Last order now please .⦅英 ⦆ラストオーダーです .3 C a. «…せよという » (上官 上司などからの )命令 , 指示, 指令 (instruction ) «to do , that 節 » ▸ The commander gave orders that the prisoner was to be shot [(⦅主に英 ⦆should ) be shot ].隊長はその捕虜を射殺せよという命令を出した (→should 7 語法 )▸ take orders from A Aの命令を聞く ▸ wait for the order to attack 攻撃せよという命令を待つ ▸ The ambassador has [is under ] orders to stop the violence .大使は暴動を抑えるように指示されている ▸ bark [shout ] orders 大声で次々指示を出す .b. (裁判所などの出す )命令 (書 ), 公的な指令 ▸ The investigators got a court order first .捜査員たちはまず最初に裁判所命令を入手した .c. 〖one's ~s 〗(人に )与えられた使命 ▸ Your orders are to bring [╳bringing ] him back alive .君の使命は彼を生きて連れ帰ることだ .4 U (社会 経済の )秩序 , 安定, 治安 (↔confusion, chaos )▸ bring law and order back into our city 我が市に法と秩序を取り戻す ▸ disrupt public order 社会の秩序を乱す ▸ Police officers came to keep order .混乱を静めるために警官がやってきた ▸ restore [maintain ] peace and order 平和と秩序を回復 [維持 ]する ▸ the natural order of things 自然の摂理 .5 C (社会の )体制 , 制度 (system )▸ The Internet has shaken the established [existing ] order .インターネットは伝統的社会 [既存の ]体制を揺るがしている .6 U 整理 , 整頓 ▸ put one's desk [affairs ] in order 机の上を片づける [身辺整理をする ]▸ The government put its finances in order .政府は財政を立て直した ▸ All were in apple-pie order .すべてがきちんと整理されていた ▸ retire in good order 整然と退却する .7 C (正常な )状態, 状況, 調子 ▸ All our equipment is in (good ) working order .私たちの装置は正常に作動中である .8 C a. ⦅かたく ⦆等級 ; 部類, 種類 (type )▸ of the highest [first ] order 最高レベルの [第一級の ]▸ plants of this order この種の植物 .b. (社会的 )序列, 階級 ▸ By using violence he got to the top of the pecking order .暴力によって彼は社会の序列の頂点へのし上がった (!強い鳥が弱い鳥をつつく習性にちなんで, pecking orderは 「社会的序列 」を示す ) ▸ the lower orders ⦅英 やや古 ⦆下層階級の人々 .c. 〘生物 〙(分類の )目 (もく ) (!綱 (class )と科 (family )の間の分類単位; →classification 2 ) .9 C 修道会, 教団 ; 聖職 (者 )▸ the Benedictine Order ベネディクト修道会 ▸ take holy orders [Holy Orders ]僧侶になる .10 C 〖the O- 〗秘密結社, 騎士団, … 団, …会 ▸ the Order of the Solar Temple 太陽の寺院教団 .11 C 勲章, 勲位 ;〖the O- 〗叙勲された人々 ▸ the Order of the Garter ガーター勲章 〘1348年にエドワード三世が制定した英国最高勲位 〙▸ the Order of Merit メリット勲位 〘1902年に制定された英国の名誉勲位 〙.12 U 議事進行 (規定 ); 議事規則 (の遵守 )▸ rise to (a point of ) order 立ち上がって発言者の議事規則を守るよう抗議する ▸ the first order of business 最初の議題 .13 C 為替, 手形 , (公的な )証文, 金券 ▸ cash a postal order 郵便為替を換金する ▸ a banker's order 銀行為替 .14 C 〘建 〙様式, 柱式 ;〘 軍 〙隊形 ; 軍装 ▸ the Corinthian order コリント様式 .15 C ⦅米 ⦆〘コンピュ 〙待ち行列 〘処理待ちの一連のデータ 〙.16 C ⦅英 やや古 ⦆(劇場などの )割引 [無料 ]入場券 .by ó rder of A A 〈当局など 〉の命令によって .c à ll A to ó rder 1 A 〈議員など 〉に静粛 [議事規則の遵守 ]を命じる .2 A 〈会議 〉の開会を宣する .in ó rder 1 (きちんと )順番になって ; 整然とした, 整頓された .2 〈機械などが 〉正常に機能して ; 〈計画などが 〉順調で ▸ Everything is in order .すべて順調です .3 〈公文書が 〉本物で, きちんと整って ▸ My passport is in order .私のパスポートは本物です .4 会議規則に則って .5 ⦅かたく ⦆〈行動 発言が 〉その場にふさわしい .in ó rder (for A ) to do ⦅かたく ⦆(A 〈人 物 〉が )…するために [目的で ](→so 1 as to do 類義 )▸ I didn't tell her about his death in order not to upset her .彼女にショックを与えないように彼の死は知らせなかった ▸ In order for people to work well together, each employee must know his or her own role within the company .一緒にうまく働けるように, 1人ひとりの従業員が会社における自らの役割を自覚しなければならない .in ó rder that …⦅かたく ⦆…するために, …する目的で ▸ She has moved to England in order that she can perfect her English .彼女は英語の完璧 (かんぺき )な習得を目指してイングランドへ移住した (!that節内はcanの代わりにcould, may, might, will, wouldなどの 助動詞 も用いる ) .in sh ò rt ó rder ⦅主に米 ⦆直ちに .in [of ] the ó rder of A ⦅英 ⦆およそA, 約A ▸ pay back something in the order of £1,000 約1千ポンドを返却する .on ó rder 取り寄せ中で, 注文済みで ▸ We have another 500 computers on order .もう500台のパソコンを発注済みである .on the ó rder of A 1 A 〈人 〉の命令で .2 ⦅米 ⦆=in the order of A .3 ⦅米 ⦆Aに似た (種類の )▸ an actor on the order of Tom Hanks トム ハンクスのような俳優 .Ó rder! (Ó rder!)1 (議場の混乱を議長に抗議して )規則違反だ .2 (議長が言って )静粛に .out of ó rder 1 〈機械などが 〉故障して (!多数の人の使用に供する機械 設備類について用いる; 個人所有の物にはbrokenを用い, ╳My watch is out of order. としない ) ▸ Out of Order ⦅掲示 ⦆故障中 ▸ This copier is out of order .このコピー機は故障している .2 順番がばらばらで, 乱丁で ▸ These two adjacent letters are out of order .その隣り合った2つの文字は順序が違う .3 ⦅英 くだけて ⦆〈行動が 〉無礼な, 許しがたい (⦅米 ⦆out of line ).4 (会議 議会などで )議会規則違反で .the ò rder of the d á y 1 ⦅かたく ⦆議事日程 .2 〘軍 〙通達 .3 ⦅くだけて ⦆(好ましくない )時代の風潮 ; 最重要の関心事 .to ó rder 注文通りに ▸ be made to order 〈衣類が 〉あつらえたもの [特注品 ]である ▸ be made [built ] to order for A ⦅比喩的に ⦆Aにとっておあつらえ向きである .動詞 ~s /-z /; ~ed /-d /; ~ing /-d (ə )rɪŋ /他動詞 1 a. 〈品物 食べ物など 〉を注文する , 発注する ▸ order ice cream for dessert デザートにアイスクリームを注文する .b. 〖order A from B 〗B 〈店 場所 人 〉にA 〈品物 食べ物など 〉を注文する ▸ order a beer from room service [the waitress ]ルームサービスで [ウエイトレスに ]ビールを頼む ▸ The company ordered a new supercomputer from IBM .その会社はIBMに新型のスーパーコンピュータを注文した .c. 〖order A B /B for A 〗A 〈人 〉にB 〈品物など 〉を注文 [手配 ]してやる (→give 他動詞 1 語法 (5 )(a ))▸ There are no shoes in this size but we could order a pair for you. ≒… we could order you a pair .このサイズの靴は品切れですが, 注文できます ▸ order (A ) a taxi [ambulance ]⦅英 ⦆(Aのために )タクシー [救急車 ]を呼ぶ .2 a. 〈事 〉を命令する , 指示する; 〈医師が 〉〈療法など 〉を指示 [処方 ]する ▸ The judge ordered an inquiry into her death .判事は彼女の死に関する調査を命じた .b. [◎ order A to do ]A 〈人 〉に …せよと命じる ; ⦅書 ⦆〖直接話法 〗…と命じる (→say 他動詞 1a 語法 )▸ The police ordered the crowd to disperse .警察は群衆に解散を命じた ▸ “Arrest that man, ” he ordered his men .「あの男を逮捕しろ 」と彼は部下に命じた .c. 〖~ A to be done /⦅主に米 ⦆done 〗A 〈人 物 事 〉が …されるように命じる ▸ Alexander the Great ordered a city (to be ) built there .アレクサンダー大王はそこに都を作るように命じた .d. 〖~ that A (⦅主に英 ⦆should ) do 〗A 〈人 〉が …するように命令する (!shouldの省略については →suggest 他動詞 語法 ) ▸ He ordered that the building (⦅主に英 ⦆should ) be bombed .彼はその建物を爆破するように命じた .e. 〖~ A +副詞 〗A 〈人 〉に移動するように命じる (!副詞 は方向の表現 ) ▸ The police ordered the man out of the car .警察は彼に車から出るように命じた ▸ The ambassador was ordered back home .大使は帰国を命じられた .3 ⦅かたく ⦆(順番に )…を並べる, 陳列する; 〈考えなど 〉を整理する, まとめる ▸ melons ordered by size 大きさごとに並べたメロン .4 〈神などが 〉…を定める, 運命づける .自動詞 1 注文する ▸ Are you ready to order , sir [ma'am ]?ご注文はお決まりでしょうか (!レストランなどで ) ▸ To order , call 800 --500 --5555 .注文はお電話で800 --500 --5555まで ▸ You can order by telephone .ご注文はお電話でお願いします ▸ Will you order for me? 私の代りに注文してくれますか .2 命令する .Ò rder Á rms! 〘軍 〙立て 銃 (つつ ).ò rder A ar ó und [⦅主に英 ⦆ab ó ut ]A 〈人 〉にああしろこうしろと指図する .ò rder A í n [í n A ]1 ⦅米 ⦆A 〈食物 〉の宅配を頼む ▸ How about ordering in (Chinese ) tonight? 今夜は (中華の )出前を頼もうか .2 A 〈軍隊など 〉に出動を命じる .ò rder A ó ff 1 A 〈人 〉に下車 [降車 ]を命じる .2 «…の理由で » 〈審判が 〉A 〈選手 〉に退場を命じる «for » .ò rder ó ut ⦅米 ⦆ «…の » 宅配 [出前 ]を頼む «for » .ò rder A ó ut [ó ut A ](治安維持のため )A 〈警察 軍隊 〉を出動させる .ò rder A ú p [ú p A ]1 (ホテルの部屋に )A 〈食物 〉を注文する, 取り寄せる .2 A 〈兵士 〉を前線に召集する .~́ b ò ok ⦅主に英 ⦆注文控え帳 ▸ have a full order book for A A 〈商品など 〉の注文が目いっぱい入っている .~́ f ò rm 注文用紙 .~́ p à per (英国議会の )議事日程表 .
ordered
ó r dered 形容詞 〖通例 名詞 の前で 〗きちんとした, 確固たる, 秩序ある 〈制度 社会など 〉(↔chaotic ).
orderly
or der ly /ɔ́ː r də r li /〖order (順序 )ly (の )〗形容詞 more ~; most ~1 整然とした , きちんとした, 統制の取れた ▸ The bedroom is neat and orderly .寝室はきちんと片付いていた .2 〈方法が 〉てきぱきとした, スムーズな ; 秩序を守る ▸ in a orderly way 整然と, 滞りなく .3 〈性格が 〉きちんとした, 落ち着いた, 礼儀正しい ; おとなしい .4 命令の, 伝令の ; 当番の ▸ an orderly book (中隊 連隊の )命令簿 ▸ an orderly officer 当直将校 ▸ an orderly room 大 [中 ]隊事務室 .名詞 複 -lies C 1 (病院の )雑役夫, 用務員 ;〘 軍 〙 (男性の )病院付添人 .2 〘軍 〙当番兵, 伝令 .3 ⦅英 ⦆市街清掃夫 .ó r der li ness 名詞 U 整理のよさ .