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单词 standing orders
释义

order /örˈdər/

noun
  1. Arrangement
  2. Sequence
  3. Disposition
  4. Proper arrangement
  5. Proper condition
  6. The condition of normal or proper functioning
  7. A regular or suitable arrangement
  8. A method
  9. A system
  10. Tidiness
  11. A restrained or undisturbed condition
  12. A form of procedure or ceremony
  13. The accepted mode of proceeding at a meeting
  14. A practice
  15. Grade, degree, rank or position, esp in a hierarchy
  16. The degree of a curve or equation
  17. A command
  18. A written instruction to pay money
  19. A customer's instruction to supply goods or perform work
  20. The goods supplied
  21. A pass for admission or other privilege
  22. A class of society
  23. A body of persons of the same rank, profession, etc
  24. A fraternity, esp religious or knightly
  25. A body modelled on a knightly order, to which members are admitted as an honour
  26. The insignia of such a body
  27. A group above a family but below a class (biology)
  28. One of the different ways in which the column and its entablature with their various parts are moulded and related to each other (architecture)
  29. One of the successively recessed arches of an archway
  30. Due action towards some end, esp in the old phrase ‘to take order’
  31. The position of a weapon with butt on ground, muzzle close to the right side
  32. Equipment and uniform for a particular purpose, as in battle order
  33. A portion or helping in a restaurant, etc (N American)
  34. (in pl) the several degrees or grades of the Christian ministry
transitive verb
  1. To arrange
  2. To set in order
  3. To put in the position of order (military)
  4. To regulate
  5. To command
  6. To give an order for
  7. To order to be (done, etc) (US)
  8. To conduct (Shakespeare)
intransitive verb
  1. To give commands
  2. To request the supply of something, esp food
interjection

Used in calling for order or to order

ORIGIN: Fr ordre, from L ordō, -inis

orˈderer noun

orˈdering noun

  1. Arrangement
  2. Management
  3. The act or ceremony of ordaining eg priests or deacons

orˈderless adjective

  1. Without order
  2. Disorderly

orˈderliness noun

orˈderly adjective

  1. In good order
  2. Regular
  3. Well-regulated
  4. Of good behaviour
  5. Quiet
  6. Being on duty
  7. Of or relating to orders (military)
adverb
  1. Regularly
  2. Methodically
noun
  1. A private soldier with particular duties
  2. Formerly, a non-commissioned officer who carried official messages for his superior officer
  3. A hospital attendant
  4. A street cleaner

order book noun

  1. A book for entering the orders of customers, the special orders of a commanding officer, or the motions to be put to the House of Commons
  2. The amount of orders received and awaiting completion

order form noun

A printed form on which the details of a customer's order are written

order in council noun

An order by the sovereign with advice of the Privy Council

orderly bin noun

A street receptacle for refuse

orderly officer noun

The officer on duty for the day

orderly room noun

A room for regimental, company, etc, business

order of battle noun

Arrangement of troops or ships in preparation for a fight

order of magnitude noun

  1. The approximate size or number of something, usu measured in a scale from one value to ten times that value
  2. (loosely) a rising scale in terms of size, quantity, etc

order of the day noun

  1. Business set down for the day
  2. A proclamation by a dictator or military commander
  3. Something necessary, normal, prevalent, particularly popular, etc at a given time

order paper noun

A paper showing the order of business, esp in parliament

call to order see call1

full orders

The priesthood

holy orders

  1. An institution, in the Roman and Greek Churches a sacrament, by which a person is specially set apart for the service of religion
  2. The rank of an ordained minister of religion

in order

  1. With the purpose (with to or that)
  2. In accordance with rules of procedure at meetings
  3. Appropriate, suitable, likely
  4. (also in good, working, etc order) operating, or able to operate, well or correctly
  5. In the correct, desired, etc order

in short order (US)

Promptly

in or of the order of

More or less of the size, quantity or proportion stated

minor orders

In the Roman Catholic Church those of acolyte, exorcist, reader and doorkeeper, in the Eastern Churches, reader

on order

Having been ordered but not yet supplied

order about or around

To give orders to in a domineering fashion

out of order

  1. Not in order
  2. (of actions, behaviour, etc, or of people as acting or behaving in some way) outside normally acceptable standards, excessive or uncontrolled (informal)

sailing orders

Written instructions given to the commander of a vessel before sailing

sealed orders

Instructions not to be opened until a specified time

standing orders see under stand

take order (obsolete)

To take measures or steps

take orders

To be ordained

tall or large order (informal)

An esp unreasonably large request or difficult assignment

to order

According to, and in fulfilment of, an order

stand /stand/

intransitive verb (pat and pap stood; Scot stoodˈen, studdˈen; infinitive, Spenser, standˈen)
  1. To be, become, or remain upright, erect, rigid, or still
  2. To be on, or rise to, one's feet
  3. To be a particular height, as in He stands six feet tall
  4. To be steadfast
  5. To have or take a position
  6. To assume the attitude and duties of (guard, sentinel)
  7. To be or remain
  8. To be set or situated
  9. To be likely, be in a position (to lose or gain something)
  10. To come to a stop, be stationary or remain still
  11. Used with and to introduce a second verb, eg stand and stare
  12. To be set down
  13. To hold a course or direction (with for; nautical)
  14. To hold good
  15. To endure, continue to exist
  16. To be, at the moment in question, as in the score stands at 3 to 1, as things stand
  17. To be a representative, representation or symbol (with for)
  18. To be a candidate (with for)
  19. (of a vehicle) to park, wait (N American)
transitive verb
  1. To withstand
  2. To tolerate
  3. To endure
  4. To sustain
  5. To suffer, undergo
  6. To abide by
  7. To be at the expense of, offer and pay for
  8. To station, cause to stand
  9. To set erect, in place, or in position
noun
  1. An act, manner, or place of standing
  2. A taking up of a position for resistance
  3. Resistance
  4. An attitude or position adopted
  5. The partnership of any two batsmen at the wicket, the period of time of the partnership, or the runs made during it (cricket)
  6. A standing position
  7. A standstill
  8. A stoppage
  9. A post, station
  10. A stall or position occupied by a trader or an organization at an exhibition, for the display of goods, etc
  11. A place, sometimes under cover, for awaiting game
  12. A place for vehicles awaiting hire
  13. A structure, with or without a roof, with sitting or standing accommodation for spectators, eg at a football or rugby game
  14. A stop on tour to give one or more performances, or the place where it is made (theatre)
  15. A platform
  16. A witness box (N American)
  17. A base or structure for setting things on
  18. A piece of furniture for hanging things from
  19. A company of plovers
  20. A complete set, esp (Scot) a suit of clothes or armour
  21. A shearer's position in a shed (Aust and NZ)
  22. A standing growth or crop
  23. A young tree left standing
  24. A tub or vat
ORIGIN: OE standan; Gothic standan; cf Ger stehen, Gr histanai to place, L stāre to stand

standeeˈ noun

  1. A person standing as opposed to sitting (esp US)
  2. A cardboard figure that is able to stand upright

standˈer noun

standˈing adjective

  1. Established
  2. Settled
  3. Permanent
  4. Fixed
  5. Stagnant
  6. Erect
  7. Having a base
  8. Done as one stands
  9. From a standing position, without preliminary movement (eg standing jump, standing start)
noun
  1. The action of someone who or something that stands
  2. Duration or continuance
  3. A place to stand in or on
  4. Position, status or reputation in one's profession or in society
  5. A current ranking within a graded scale, esp in sport
  6. A right or capacity to sue or maintain an action

standˈ-alone adjective

(of a system, device, etc) able to operate unconnected to and unaided by any other

noun

A stand-alone system or device

standˈ-by noun

  1. That which, or someone whom, one relies on or readily resorts to
  2. Something or someone available for use in an emergency (see also on stand-by below)

adjective

(of an airline passenger, ticket, fare, etc) occupying, or for, an aircraft seat not booked in advance but taken as available, usu with some price reduction, at the time of departure

standˈ-down noun (military)

  1. A return to normal duties after an alert
  2. An off-duty period

standˈer-by noun (pl standˈers-by) (Shakespeare)

A bystander

stand first noun (press)

An introductory paragraph in bigger and/or bolder type summarizing the contents of a newspaper or magazine article

standˈ-in noun

A substitute

standing bed noun

A high bedstead, not a truckle bed

standing committee noun

One permanently established to deal with a particular matter

standing crop noun

  1. A growing crop
  2. The total biomass in a particular environment at a particular time

standing joke noun

A subject that raises a laugh whenever it is mentioned

standing-off dose noun (radiology)

The absorbed dose after which occupationally exposed radiation workers must be transferred to duties not involving further exposure

standing order noun

  1. An instruction from a customer to his or her bank to make regular payments from his or her account (also called banker's order)
  2. An order placed with a shopkeeper, etc for the regular supply of a newspaper or other goods
  3. A military order with long-term application
  4. (in pl) regulations for procedure adopted by a legislative assembly (also standing rules)

standing ovation noun

Applause from an audience that rises to its feet in its enthusiasm

standing rigging noun

The fixed ropes in a ship

standˈing-room noun

Room for standing, without a seat

standing stone noun (archaeology)

A great stone set erect in the ground, thought to be of religious significance to prehistoric peoples

standing wave noun

  1. The pattern of maxima and minima when two sets of oppositely travelling waves of the same frequency interfere with each other (physics)
  2. (in pl) a long-lasting layered cloud-formation seen in hilly regions (meteorology)

standˈ-off noun

  1. A rugby halfback who stands away from the scrum as a link between scrum-half and the three-quarters (also stand-off half)
  2. A tie, draw or deadlock (chiefly N American)
  3. Any object that stands, projects or holds another a short distance away, eg on a ladder, an attachment that holds it away from the surface supporting it

standˈoff adjective

  1. Standoffish (N American)
  2. (of a missile) capable of being released at a long distance from its target

standoffˈish adjective

Inclined to hold aloof, keep others at arm's length

standoffˈishness noun

stand oil noun

A drying oil used in paints, varnishes, etc

standˈout noun

Someone or something exceptional or of high quality

standpattˈer noun (US)

  1. Someone who refuses to accept or consider change
  2. A political diehard

standpattˈism noun

standˈpipe noun

  1. An open vertical pipe connected to a pipeline, to ensure that the pressure head at that point cannot exceed the length of the pipe
  2. A pipe fitted with a tap, used to obtain water, eg from an attached hose

standˈpoint noun

A viewpoint

standˈstill noun

A complete stop

adjective

  1. Stationary
  2. Unmoving
  3. Forbidding or refraining from movement

standstill agreement noun

An agreement between parties to respect the status quo, esp granting more time for repayment of a debt

standˈ-to noun

A precautionary parade or taking of posts

standˈ-up adjective

  1. Erect
  2. Done or taken in a standing position
  3. (of a fight) in earnest
  4. Delivering, or consisting of, a comic monologue without feed or other support

noun

  1. Stand-up comedy
  2. One who performs this
  3. Something that stands upright, either independently or with a support to hold it in position
  4. A broken date (between two people) (informal)

all standing

  1. Everything remaining as it stands
  2. Without unrigging
  3. Fully clad

it stands to reason

It is only logical to assume

make a stand

To halt and offer resistance

one-night stand see under one

on stand-by

In readiness to provide assistance, or work, in an emergency

stand against

To resist

stand by

  1. To support
  2. To adhere to, abide by
  3. To be at hand
  4. To hold oneself in readiness
  5. To prepare to work at
  6. To look on without taking action

stand down

  1. To leave the witness box
  2. (esp of a member or members of the armed forces) to go off duty
  3. To withdraw from a contest or from a controlling position

stand fast

To be unmoved

stand fire

To remain steady under the fire of an enemy (also figurative)

stand for

  1. To be a candidate for
  2. To direct the course towards (nautical)
  3. To be a sponsor for
  4. To represent, symbolize
  5. To champion
  6. To put up with, endure (informal)

stand from (nautical)

To direct the course from

stand in

  1. To cost
  2. To become a party
  3. To have an understanding, be in league
  4. To deputize, act as a substitute (with for)

stand in with

To support, act together with

stand low (printing)

To fall short of the standard height

stand off

  1. To keep at a distance
  2. To direct the course from (nautical)
  3. To forbear compliance or intimacy (Shakespeare)
  4. To suspend temporarily from employment

stand off and on (nautical)

To sail away from shore and then towards it

stand on

  1. To continue on the same tack or course (nautical)
  2. To insist on
  3. To set store by (see also under ceremony)
  4. To behove
  5. To found upon

stand one's ground

To maintain one's position

stand one's hand, stand sam (informal), stand shot and stand treat

To treat the company, esp to drinks

stand on one's own (two) feet

To manage one's own affairs without help

stand out

  1. To project, be prominent
  2. Not to comply, to refuse to yield, take an independent stand (with against or for)

stand over

  1. To keep (someone who is working, etc) under close supervision
  2. To postpone or be postponed

stand pat (US)

  1. To play one's hand in poker as it was dealt, without drawing any cards
  2. To adhere to an established, esp political, principle, resisting all compromise (figurative)

stand to

  1. To fall to, set to work
  2. To back up
  3. To uphold
  4. To take up a position in readiness for orders

stand to gain, win, etc

To be in a position to gain, win, etc

stand up

  1. To get to one's feet
  2. To take position for a dance
  3. To prove, or remain, valid
  4. To be clad (with in)
  5. To fail to keep an appointment with (informal)

stand up for

To support or attempt to defend

stand upon

  1. To stand on
  2. To attack (Bible)

stand up to

  1. To meet (an opponent, etc) face to face, to show resistance to
  2. To fulfil (an obligation, etc) fairly
  3. To withstand (hard wear, etc)

stand well

To be in favour

stand with

To be consistent

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更新时间:2024/11/14 17:14:57