| a screen or mat covered with a dark material for shielding a camera lens from excess light or glare. |
| a stew of meat, vegetables, potatoes, etc. |
order (ˈɔːdə) ![]() | |
| —n | |
| 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 plural) 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. | a. a commission or instruction to produce or supply something in return for payment |
| b. the commodity produced or supplied | |
| c. (as modifier): order form | |
| 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. | a. a group of people holding a specific honour for service or merit, conferred on them by a sovereign or state |
| b. the insignia of such a group | |
| 15. | a. Doric Ionic Corinthian Tuscan See also composite any of the five major classical styles of architecture classified by the style of columns and entablatures used |
| b. any style of architecture | |
| 16. | Christianity |
| a. the sacrament by which bishops, priests, etc, have their offices conferred upon them | |
| b. any of the degrees into which the ministry is divided | |
| c. the office of an ordained Christian minister | |
| 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 |
| a. the number of times a function must be differentiated to obtain a given derivative | |
| b. the order of the highest derivative in a differential equation | |
| c. the number of rows or columns in a determinant or square matrix | |
| d. the number of members of a finite group | |
| 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 |
| a. in sequence | |
| b. properly arranged | |
| c. appropriate or fitting | |
| 24. | (preposition; |
| 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 |
| a. not in sequence | |
| b. not working | |
| c. not following the rules or customary procedure | |
| 30. | to order |
| a. according to a buyer's specifications | |
| b. on request or demand | |
| —vb | |
| 31. | (tr) 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. | (tr) to instruct or command to move, go, etc (to a specified place): they ordered her into the house |
| 34. | (tr; may take a clause as object) to authorize; prescribe: the doctor ordered a strict diet |
| 35. | (tr) to arrange, regulate, or dispose (articles) in their proper places |
| 36. | (of fate or the gods) to will; ordain |
| 37. | rare (tr) to ordain |
| —interj | |
| 38. | an exclamation of protest against an infringement of established procedure |
| 39. | an exclamation demanding that orderly behaviour be restored |
| [C13: from Old French ordre, from Latin ordō] | |
| 'orderer | |
| —n | |
| 'orderless | |
| —adj | |
order or·der (ôr'dər)
n.
A taxonomic category of organisms ranking above a family and below a class.
| order (ôr'dər) Pronunciation Key
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.)
in order
In proper sequence or arrangement, as in The children lined up in order of size, or Are the letters all in order? [c. 1400]
Suitable, correct, appropriate, as in A few words on this subject are in order now. [Mid-1800s]
See in short order.
in order that. So that, to the end or purpose that, as in In order that Bob can meet my husband, we've come early. [Early 1700s]
in order to. For the purpose of, as a means to, as in We'll have to hire more help in order to finish on time. This usage always precedes a verb, such as finish in the example. [c. 1700]