ORDERED
OR'DERED, participle passive Regulated; methodized; disposed; commanded; managed.
American Dictionary of the English Language, Noah Webster, 1828.
1.512 entries
OR'DERED, participle passive Regulated; methodized; disposed; commanded; managed.
OR'DERER, noun1. One that gives orders.2. One that methodizes or regulates.
OR'DERING, participle present tense Regulating; systemizing; commanding; disposing.OR'DERING, noun Disposition; distribution. 2 Chronicles 24:1.
OR'DERLESS, adjective Without regularity; disorderly; out of rule.
OR'DERLINESS, noun [from orderly.]1. Regularity; a state of being methodical.2. The state of being orderly.
OR'DERLY, adjective1. Methodical; regular2. Observant of order or method.3. Well regulated; performed in good order; not tumultuous; as an orderly march.4. According to establis...
ORDINABIL'ITY, noun Capability of being appointed. [Not used.]
OR'DINABLE, adjective Such as may be appointed. [Not used.]
OR'DINAL, adjective [Latin ordinalis.] Noting order; as the ordinal numbers, first, second, third, etc.OR'DINAL, noun1. A number noting order.2. A book containing the order of d...
OR'DINANCE, noun1. A rule established by authority; a permanent rule of action. An ordinance may be a law or statute of sovereign power. In this sense it is often used in the Sc...
OR'DINANT, adjective [Latin ordinans.] Ordaining; decreeing. [Not used.]
OR'DINARILY, adverb Primarily, according to established rules or settled method; hence, commonly; usually; in most cases as a winter more than ordinarily severe.
OR'DINARY, adjective [Latin ordinarius.]1. According to established order; methodical; regular; customary; as the ordinary forms of law or justice.2. Common; usual.Method is not...
OR'DINATE, verb transitive To appoint. [Not used.]OR'DINATE, adjective [Latin ordinatus.] Regular; methodical. An ordinate figure is one whose sides and angles are equal.OR'DINA...
OR'DINATELY, adverb In a regular methodical manner.
ORDINA'TION, noun [Latin ordinatio.]1. The state of being ordained or appointed; established order or tendency consequent on a decree.Virtue and vice have a natural ordination t...
OR'DINATIVE, adjective Directing; giving order.
ORD'NANCE, noun [from ordinance.] Cannon or great guns, mortars and howitzers; artillery.
OR'DONNANCE, noun In painting, the disposition of the parts of a picture, either in regard to the whole piece or to the several parts.
OR'DURE, noun Dung; excrements.
ORE, noun [Latin as, aris, brass.1. The compound of a metal and some other substance, as oxygen, sulphur or carbon, called its mineralizer, by which its properties are disguised...
OR'E-WEED,OR'E-WOOD, noun Sea Weed. [Not used.]
OR'E-WOOD, n. Sea Weed. [Not used.]
O'READ, noun [from Gr. mountain.] A mountain nymph.
ORF'GILD, nounThe restitution of goods or money stolen, if taken in the day time.
OR'FRAYS, noun Fringe of gold; gold embroidery.
OR'GAL, noun Argal; lees of wine dried; tartar.