[
US
/ɹiˈɔɹdɝ/
]
[ UK /ɹɪˈɔːdɐ/ ]
[ UK /ɹɪˈɔːdɐ/ ]
VERB
- assign a new order to
-
make a new request to be supplied with
The store had to reorder the popular CD several times
NOUN
-
a repeated order for the same merchandise
he's the one who sends out all the new orders and reorders
How To Use reorder In A Sentence
- Radical is still reviewing whether to offer a second printing based on incoming reorders. FVZA: Federal Vampire and Zombie Agency #1 sells out | Major Spoilers - Comic Book Reviews and News
- We meet the commixture of materials and things in our excavation whose object is, among other things, to reorder, to abolish the disorder of collapse and dilapidation, to find significance and signification in the apparent chaos.
- In the vacuum, each side began to suspect the worst and reordered their foreign policies accordingly.
- At the desk, customers can make appointments with personal shoppers, arrange private shopping parties, request monogramming, preorder items from its high-end Collection line, look at color swatches for bridesmaid dresses that are sold online, and order clothes, such as those from the kids 'line called crewcuts, that aren't carried in most stores. Concierge Services and Mismatched Socks
- Another example in the supply system: We are getting to the point where a certain number of items in stock will trigger a reorder.
- We haven't had as many reorders," Marjee Levine at New England Sculpture Service, a Boston-based foundry, said. The Dawn of a Faux-Bronze Age?
- Egypt's new government presents the policy shift as part of a general diplomatic reopening, rather than a reordering, of its regional relationships. Egyptians Court U.S. Foes
- We'll reorder the furniture for our bedrooms.
- Certain sequences of words are rigid in English, and one quickly runs into trouble when reordering them. The English Is Coming!
- He reordered two pairs of black leather shoes of the latest type.