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English Word Roots/Word Roots

ENGLISH ROOT WORD: order "order", "begin" from Latin ordo, ordinis, ordiri

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【order】 is a [English Root word(stem)] from the Latin word(s) "ordo," "ordinis," and "ordiri."
It carries the basic meaning of "order," and "begin."

from PIE *ar- "to fit together"



[English words in the top 5000 most frequently used containing the root "order"]

coordinate **[4552] to organize or integrate (diverse elements) in a harmonious operation
coordination ☆[4982] balanced and effective interaction of movement, actions, etc
coordinator **[4290]
disorder ****[2074] A disorder is a problem or illness which affects someone''s mind or body.
extraordinary ****[1859] If you describe something or someone as extraordinary, you mean that they have some extremely good or special quality.
order ****[979] If someone in authority gives you an order, they tell you to do something.
ordinary ****[1641] Ordinary people or things are normal and not special or different in any way.



[WORD ROOT]root order
[VARIATIONS OF ROOT] order, ordin, ordinary
[ETYMOLOGY]root (Latin) ordo, ordinis, ordiri
[MEANING]root order, begin

【DETAILs OF ORIGIN(ETYMOLOGY】

  • 【Latin】 ordo [from Proto-Italic *ordo, genitive ordinis, akin to Latin ordiri, Related to Latin ordior] row; rank, series, arrangement; (originally) a row of threads in a loom
  • 【Latin】 ordinis [ordinis of ordo] row
  • 【Latin】 ordiri [akin to Latin ordo] to begin



Please see the Word information in detail as follows;

★★★★(top 2,000) ★★★(top 3,500) ★★(top 4,500) ☆(top 6,000)



coordinate ★★[4552] verb from coordinate 〈 order
【DEFINITION】 to organize or integrate (diverse elements) in a harmonious operation
【Declension/Conjugation】 사, coordinated coordinated coordinating coordinates
【ROOTs】 co(com); together, with, completely ordin(order); order ate; verb suffix
【Etymology】 《Latin ordo[from Proto-Italic *ordo, genitive ordinis, akin to Latin ordiri, Related to Latin ordior] row; rank, series, arrangement; (originally) a row of threads in a loom
【DERIVATIVEs】 coordinate, coordinately, co-ordinately, coordinateness, co-ordinateness, coordination, coordinative, co-ordinative, coordinator, co-ordinator

coordination ☆[4982] noun from coordinate 〈 order
【DEFINITION】 balanced and effective interaction of movement, actions, etc
【pl.】 UNCOUNTABLE NOUN
【COMPOSITION】 coordinate + ion
【ROOTs】 co(com); together, with, completely ordin(order); order ation(ion); noun suffix
【Etymology】 《Latin ordo[from Proto-Italic *ordo, genitive ordinis, akin to Latin ordiri, Related to Latin ordior] row; rank, series, arrangement; (originally) a row of threads in a loom
【DERIVATIVEs】 coordinate, coordinately, co-ordinately, coordinateness, co-ordinateness, coordination, coordinative, co-ordinative, coordinator, co-ordinator



coordinator ★★[4290] noun from coordinate 〈 order
【DEFINITION】
【COMPOSITION】 coordinate + or
【ROOTs】 co(com); together, with, completely ordin(order); order ator; noun suffix
【Etymology】 《Latin ordo[from Proto-Italic *ordo, genitive ordinis, akin to Latin ordiri, Related to Latin ordior] row; rank, series, arrangement; (originally) a row of threads in a loom
【DERIVATIVEs】 coordinate, coordinately, co-ordinately, coordinateness, co-ordinateness, coordination, coordinative, co-ordinative, coordinator, co-ordinator

disorder ★★★★[2074] noun from disorder 〈 order
【DEFINITION】 A disorder is a problem or illness which affects someone's mind or body.
【pl.】 disorders
【ANTONYM】 order
【COMPOSITION】 dis + order
【ROOTs】 dis; away, spart order; order
【Etymology】 《Latin ordo[from Proto-Italic *ordo, genitive ordinis, akin to Latin ordiri, Related to Latin ordior] row; rank, series, arrangement; (originally) a row of threads in a loom
【DERIVATIVEs】 disorderly, disorder

extraordinary ★★★★[1859] adjective from extraordinary 〈 order
【DEFINITION】 If you describe something or someone as extraordinary, you mean that they have some extremely good or special quality.
【SYNONYM】 incredible, phenomenal, exceeding
【ANTONYM】 ordinary
【COMPOSITION】 extra + ordinary
【ROOTs】 extra; outer, beyond ordin(order); order ary; noun suffix
【Etymology】 《Latin extra ordinemout of order
【First Known Meaning】 being beyond or out of the common order or rule; not of the usual, customary, or regular kind
【DERIVATIVEs】 extraordinarily, extraordinariness, extraordinary

order ★★★★[979] noun from order
【DEFINITION】 ① If someone in authority gives you an order, they tell you to do something.
② A court order is a legal instruction stating that something must be done.
③ An order is a request for something to be brought, made, or obtained for you in return for money.
【pl.】 orders
【SYNONYM】 instruction
【ANTONYM】 disorder
【ROOTs】 order; order
【Etymology】 《Latin ordo[from Proto-Italic *ordo, genitive ordinis, akin to Latin ordiri, Related to Latin ordior] row; rank, series, arrangement; (originally) a row of threads in a loom
【DERIVATIVEs】 orderer, orderless, orderly, ordinal, order

ordinary ★★★★[1641] adjective from order
【DEFINITION】 Ordinary people or things are normal and not special or different in any way.
【ANTONYM】 extraordinary
【ROOTs】 ordin(order); order ary; adjective suffix
【Etymology】 《Latin ordo[from Proto-Italic *ordo, genitive ordinis, akin to Latin ordiri, Related to Latin ordior] row; rank, series, arrangement; (originally) a row of threads in a loom
【First Known Meaning】 regular, customary, belonging to the usual order or course, conformed to a regulated sequence or arrangement,
【DERIVATIVEs】 ordinarily, ordinariness, ordinary



Other words containing "order"; coordinal, extraordinaire, grandorder, incoordinate, incoordination, infraorder, inordinate, inordination, insubordinate, insubordination, magnorder, mirorder, ordain, ordainment, orderer, orderless, orderly, ordinal, ordinance, ordinand, ordinariate, ordinate, ordination, ordinative, ordnance, ornery, parvorder, preordain, preorder, preordination, primordial, quasiorder, reordain, reorder, reordination, suborder, subordinary, subordinate, subordination, superordain, superorder, superordinate, superordination

(※ Proto-Indo-European (PIE) is the theorized common ancestor of the Indo-European language family. Its proposed features have been derived by linguistic reconstruction from documented Indo-European languages.)

【OTHER ROOTs; 】

opt
oper-, opera-
open
one
office
off, of
odi
ode
odd
od-, hod-

 

 

 

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