| 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 angel (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 major order, minor order. |
| 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 esp. 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. |
| 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. |
| 46. | to give an order or issue orders: I wish to order, but the waiter is busy. |
| 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. |

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.)
order
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. |
pre-order
1.
2.
(2001-10-01)