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large order

/awr-der/US // ˈɔr dər //UK // (ˈɔːdə) //

大订单,大宗订单,大额订单,大单

Related Words

Definitions

n.名词 noun
  1. 1
    • : an authoritative direction or instruction; command; mandate.
    • : a command of a court or judge.
    • : a command or notice issued by a military organization or a military commander to troops, sailors, etc.
    • : the disposition of things following one after another, as in space or time; succession or sequence: The names were listed in alphabetical order.
    • : 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.
    • : formal disposition or array: the order of the troops.
    • : proper, satisfactory, or working condition.
    • : state or condition generally: His financial affairs were in good order.
    • : conformity or obedience to law or established authority; absence of disturbance, riot, revolt, unruliness, etc.: A police officer was there to maintain order.
    • : customary mode of procedure; established practice or usage.
    • : 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.
    • : prevailing course or arrangement of things; established system or regime: The old order is changing.
    • : conformity to this.
    • : a direction or commission to make, provide, or furnish something: The salesclerk will take your order.
    • : a quantity of goods or items purchased or sold: The druggist is sending the order right over.
    • : Grammar. the arrangement of the elements of a construction in a particular sequence, as the placing of John before the verb and of George after it in John saw George.the hierarchy of grammatical rules applying to a construction.the rank of immediate constituents.
    • : any of the nine grades of angels in medieval angelology.Compare angel.
    • : Mathematics. degree, as in algebra.the number of rows or columns of a square matrix or determinant.the number of times a function has been differentiated to produce a given derivative: a second order derivative.the order of the highest derivative appearing in a given differential equation: d2y/dx2 + 3y − 6 = 0 is a differential equation of order two.the number of elements of a given group.the smallest positive integer such that a given element in a group raised to that integer equals the identity.the least positive integer n such that permuting a given set n times under a given permutation results in the set in its original form.
    • : any class, kind, or sort, as of persons or things, distinguished from others by nature or character: talents of a high order.
    • : Biology. the usual major subdivision of a class or subclass in the classification of organisms, consisting of several families.
    • : a rank, grade, or class of persons in a community.
    • : a group or body of persons of the same profession, occupation, or pursuits: the clerical order.
    • : a body or society of persons living by common consent under the same religious, moral, or social regulations.
    • : Ecclesiastical. any of the degrees or grades of clerical office.Compare major order, minor order.
    • : a monastic society or fraternity: the Franciscan order.
    • : a written direction to pay money or deliver goods, given by a person legally entitled to dispose of it: delivery order; exchange order.
    • : Architecture. any arrangement of columns with an entablature.any of five such arrangements typical of classical architecture, including the Doric, Ionic, and Corinthian orders invented by the Greeks and adapted by the Romans, the Tuscan order, invented by the Romans, and the Composite order, first named during the Renaissance.any of several concentric rings composing an arch, especially when each projects beyond the one below.
    • : orders, the rank or status of an ordained Christian minister.
    • : Usually orders. the rite or sacrament of ordination.
    • : a prescribed form of divine service or of administration of a rite or ceremony.
    • : the service itself.
    • : the visible structures essential or desirable to the nature of the church, involving especially ministry, polity, and sacraments.
    • : a society or fraternity of knights, of combined military and monastic character, as, in the Middle Ages, the Knights Templars.
    • : a modern organization or society more or less resembling the knightly orders: fraternal orders.
    • : British. a special honor or rank conferred by a sovereign upon a person for distinguished achievement.the insignia worn by such persons.
    • : Chiefly British. a pass for admission to a theater, museum, or the like.
v.有主动词 verb
  1. 1
    • : to give an order, direction, or command to: The infantry divisions were ordered to advance.
    • : to direct or command to go or come as specified: to order a person out of one's house.
    • : to prescribe: The doctor ordered rest for the patient.
    • : to direct to be made, supplied, or furnished: to order a copy of a book.
    • : to regulate, conduct, or manage: to order one's life for greater leisure.
    • : to arrange methodically or suitably: to order chessmen for a game.
    • : Mathematics. to arrange so that if one element precedes another, it cannot be preceded by the other or by elements that the other precedes.
    • : to ordain, as God or fate does.
    • : to invest with clerical rank or authority.
v.无主动词 verb
  1. 1
    • : to give an order or issue orders: I wish to order, but the waiter is busy.

Phrases

  • order of the day, the
  • order someone about
  • apple-pie order
  • back order
  • call to order
  • in order
  • in short order
  • just what the doctor ordered
  • law and order
  • made to order
  • marching orders
  • on order
  • on the order of
  • out of order
  • pecking order
  • put one's house in order
  • short order
  • standing orders
  • tall order
  • to order

Synonyms & Antonyms

as inrugged
as inpredicament
Synonyms
circumstance情况,境况,情形,状况crisis危机,危机事件,危机感,危机感十足deadlock僵局,死锁,困局,僵持dilemma两难境地,困境,进退两难的局面,窘境hardship艰难困苦,困苦,困难,困难重重imbroglio争论不休,争论,争吵,争吵事件impasse僵局,困局,绝境,僵持mess混乱,混乱的局面,杂乱无章,乱七八糟的东西plight处境,困境,地步,苦难posture姿态,姿势,态势,态度quagmire泥潭,困局,困境quandary左右为难,纠结,窘境,两难asperity景气度,繁荣度,繁荣,景气bind束缚,捆绑,绑定,结合clutch离合器,离合,攥紧,攥住condition条件,状况,情况,状态corner角落,转角,拐角处,转角处drag拖动,拖累,拖拽,拖曳emergency紧急事件,紧急情况,紧急状况,紧急情况下exigency迫切性,紧迫性,迫切需求,危急情况fix修复,固定,修理,修整hang-up挂断电话,挂断,挂起,挂机hole洞,洞口,窟窿,洞洞jam卡住,卡住了,卡纸,果酱juncture关口,交接点,关头,接缝处lot很多,地段,大量,批量muddle淆乱,搞乱,淆杂,淆乱的pass通过,通过了,通,通过的perplexity困惑,迷茫,迷惑,疑惑pickle泡菜,腌制,酱菜,腌菜pinch钳制,掐死,掐断,钳子position位置,定位,职务,姿势puzzle谜题,难题,拼图,谜团rigor严谨性,严谨,严密性,严格性scrape刮削,刮擦,刮刮乐,刮soup汤,汤汁,汤品,汤水spot斑点,地点,斑斑点点,斑state国家,国家的,国家的情况strait窄窄的,狭窄的,窄的,窄窄地vicissitude沧桑,沧桑感,沧海桑田,动荡catch-22二十二点,二十二点钟bad news坏消息,不好的消息,噩耗,噩耗传来deep water深水,深层水,深水区,深水hot water热水,热水器rough go粗略地走,粗略地走了,粗略地走了一下,粗略的说tall order ticklish spot tight situation trouble高要求、怕痒的地方、紧张的情况、麻烦

Examples

  • In other words, a Paid Search agency like my own, must share certain data with advertisers in order to align itself with Google’s Third-Party policies.

  • She described an “evolution” in judicial tolerance for such orders.

  • Here’s a quick tour through 24 claims made at the Philadelphia town hall, in the order in which he answered questions.

  • Both Watches are up for order today and start shipping on Friday.

  • Some of those processes could produce trace amounts of phosphine, the team found, but orders of magnitude less than the team detected.

  • And in order for them to realize their vision, they are willing to use any means.

  • He could order the Justice Department to begin the necessary regulatory work.

  • So, in an unusual order (PDF) issued on New Years Day, District Judge Robert Hinkle clarified the issue.

  • So working with the militants in order to deliver aid “becomes a requirement,” she said.

  • Just how many fake nodes would be needed in order to pull off a successful Sybil attack against Tor is not known.

  • On the thirteenth of the same month they bound to the stake, in order to burn alive, a man who had two religious in his house.

  • Now this setting up of an orderly law-abiding self seems to me to imply that there are impulses which make for order.

  • Turn away from sin and order thy hands aright, and cleanse thy heart from all offence.

  • Dockier, a prominent leader of the Levelers, in the times of the English commonwealth, was shot by order of the government.

  • Yet if there is a measure of untruth in such pretty flatteries, one needs to be superhuman in order to condemn them harshly.