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单词 reorder
释义

reordern.

Brit. /ˌriːˈɔːdə/, /rɪˈɔːdə/, U.S. /riˈɔrdər/
Origin: Formed within English, by conversion. Etymon: reorder v.
Etymology: < reorder v.
A renewed or repeated order for goods.
ΘΚΠ
society > trade and finance > buying > [noun] > order > repeated order
reorder1883
repeat1885
1883 Fort Wayne (Indiana) Daily Gaz. 1 Sept. 3/1 Prints have been doing better, reorders and new selections hauing [sic] taken a very good quantity.
1901 Scotsman 8 Apr. 9/7 Current trade is confined to small reorders.
1928 Publishers' Weekly 9 June 2376 It is not easy on placing advance orders..to get the full value of the suggestions of the clerks, but on the reorders this is simpler.
1977 Time Out 21 Jan. 3/3 The chap behind the counter..is there to take your re-orders when you come back.
1992 Sci. Fiction & Fantasy Writers of America Bull. Spring 25/3 Unless you call them, ask them to check the shelf, and then offer them more bookplates for a follow-up reorder.
This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, December 2009; most recently modified version published online March 2022).

reorderv.

Brit. /ˌriːˈɔːdə/, /rɪˈɔːdə/, U.S. /riˈɔrdər/
Forms: see re- prefix and order v.
Origin: Formed within English, by derivation. Etymons: re- prefix, order v.
Etymology: < re- prefix + order v. Compare reordain v. and foreign-language forms cited at that entry.
1. transitive. To set in order again; to re-establish, rearrange; to put into a new order. Also reflexive and intransitive.
ΘΚΠ
the world > relative properties > order > put in (proper) order [verb (transitive)] > again
reorder1579
replume1704
reassort1817
reset1829
re-sort1836
the world > relative properties > order > put in order [verb (reflexive)] > again
repair1570
reorder1579
1579 G. Fenton tr. F. Guicciardini Hist. Guicciardin i. 43 He did so disorder thinstruments of peace and concord in Italy, that being neuer able since to reorder [It. riordinare; Fr. (c1570) remettre, (1577) reordonner] & reduce them, other nations..haue had good meane to oppresse them miserably.
1609 S. Daniel Civile Wares (rev. ed.) viii. xliv. 214 Seeking to allay All greeuances; reorder equity.
1641 Earl of Monmouth tr. G. F. Biondi Hist. Civil Warres Eng. I. v. 162 The English this meane while having reordered themselves, set furiously upon them.
1656 Earl of Monmouth tr. T. Boccalini Ragguagli di Parnasso i. lxxvii. 155 Whilst powerful men..have disordered the world, men go about to re-order it.
1855 E. B. Pusey Doctr. Real Presence 212 The power of the word of God in ordering or reordering as He wills.
1894 W. D. Howells in Harper's Mag. Feb. 376 Mrs. Campbell runs to the mirror..and hastily reorders her dress.
1924 C. D. Morley One Act Plays 68 (Stage direction) She sits again at the dresser and begins to reorder her coiffure.
1953 W. S. Churchill Let. 25 Sept. in W. S. Churchill & C. S. Churchill Speaking for Themselves (1999) xxv. 574 I continue to reorder my path.
1977 R. Morris in M. Binney & P. Burman Change & Decay 140/2 We surely have a duty to record it as and when it becomes necessary to repair, convert, demolish, re-order or abandon churches.
1996 City Paper (Baltimore) 24 Apr. 8/3 Bob Hillman simply says the mayor ‘needs to reorder his priorities’.
2. transitive. = reordain v. 2. Obsolete.
ΘΚΠ
society > faith > worship > sacrament > order > ordination > ordain [verb (transitive)] > for second time
reorder1581
reordain1613
1581 W. Fulke Reioynder Bristows Replie x. 299 Wee confesse their orders to bee good ynough, because we reorder not them, which is false: for I saide, their admission of the Church is a newe calling.
1593 T. Bilson Perpetual Govt. Christes Church 359 Such as were ordained by Miletius shoulde be reordered.
1705 D. Jones Life William III (rev. ed.) 248 The Commissioners appointed by the King to prepare Matters, had under Consideration an Important Point about Re-ordering Dissenting Ministers.
3.
a. transitive. To send (a person) again by order (to a place).
ΘΚΠ
society > authority > command > command or bidding > command [verb (transitive)] > send (a person) > again
reorder1680
1680 Tryal & Sentence E. Cellier 22 He was Re-Ordered to Prison.
1799 R. Sickelmore Agnes & Leonora II. 32 I was therefore re-ordered back to prison.
1838 Army & Navy Chron. 1 Mar. 235/1 It appears..that Lieutenant Williams and the other officers accompanying him were reordered to the Norfolk station.
1865 Gentleman's Mag. June 804/2 Being promoted to the command, Jan. 7 1808, of the ‘Cephalus,’ 18, and re-ordered to the Mediterranean, Capt. Harvey there succeeded in capturing four privateers.
1979 P. Mazgaj Action Française xi. 194 He refused to obey an order, and his commanding officer used the incident to take his revenge; Bintz was reordered to the disciplinary unit.
1999 R. W. Leonard Secret Soldiers of Revol. iii. 62 He was re-ordered to Amsterdam, where..he was put in charge of the illegal residency operating against Great Britain.
b. transitive. To repeat an order for (a thing).
ΘΚΠ
the mind > possession > acquisition > obtain or acquire [verb (transitive)] > obtain or acquire in a certain way > by asking, entreaty, or importunity > by ordering > again
reorder1810
1810 R. Southey in J. W. Robberds Mem. W. Taylor (1843) II. 300 If it should not reach you in due time after it is advertized, fail not to let me know, that I may re-order it.
1866 Proc. Mass. Hist. Soc. 1864–5 332 I..re-ordered about one fourth part of such goods as I thought would be most in demand.
1920 Racine (Wisconsin) Jrnl.-News 7 Jan. 4/4 (advt.) Owing to the increasing scarcity, of certain leathers, we shall be unable to reorder certain styles.
1967 N. S. M. Cox & M. W. Grose Organization Bibliogr. Rec. by Computer vi. 162 Not all delayed books are going to be re-ordered.
1992 Sci. Fiction & Fantasy Writers of America Bull. Spring 25/3 The independent distributors..will be..wondering if they should reorder from the publisher if a title looks like it will..keep selling well.

Derivatives

reˈordered adj.
ΘΚΠ
the world > relative properties > order > [adjective] > ordered or systematically arranged > again
reordered1600
1600 E. Fairfax tr. T. Tasso Godfrey of Bulloigne xx. lxxxviii. 381 Their Lord in haste To venge their losse his band reordred brings.
1877 Appletons' Jrnl. Nov. 427/2 As soon as reordered nerves permitted, he was hastening towards Lionel's house.
1938 New Statesman 21 May 860/2 Ordered, counter-ordered and reordered machines.
1994 Daily Tel. 9 Feb. 20/4 What were euphemistically called ‘re-ordered’ families—those where the second marriage had broken down and yet more step-parents had been acquired.
reˈordering n.
ΘΚΠ
the world > relative properties > order > [noun] > putting in order > again
reordering1595
re-sorting1845
recategorization1919
society > trade and finance > buying > [noun] > order > repeating an order
reordering1962
1595 S. Daniel First Fowre Bks. Ciuile Warres ii. lxxii. sig. K2 As seeking but the states reordering.
1618 H. Wotton Let. in Reliquiæ Wottonianæ (1672) 485 For the re-ordering of my Exchanges, which have been much incommodated.
1855 E. B. Pusey Doctr. Real Presence Note Q. 240 Instances which show how S. Chrysostom speaks of God's ‘re-ordering nature’.
1889 H. D. Traill Lord Strafford viii. 101 He applied himself with his customary vigour to the re-ordering of this matter.
1962 A. Battersby Guide to Stock Control v. 42 The boundary between them remains as a mark which indicates the Re-ordering Level (ROL).
1990 H. P. Chapman Rembrandt's Self-portraits Introduction 5 The growth of individualism marked a radical reordering of society that prompted many to turn inward.
This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, December 2009; most recently modified version published online March 2022).
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