请输入您要查询的英文单词:

 

单词 call to order
释义

call1 /köl/

intransitive verb
  1. To cry aloud, speak loudly, shout (often with out)
  2. Of an animal or bird, to utter a cry or characteristic sound
  3. To make a short visit (with on, for, at)
  4. To make a telephone call
  5. To demand that a player show his hand after repeated raising of stakes (poker)
  6. To try to predict the result of tossing a coin
  7. To make a bid (bridge)
transitive verb and intransitive verb (cards)

To declare (trump suit, etc)

transitive verb
  1. To name
  2. To summon or request to be present
  3. To rouse from sleep or from bed
  4. To designate or reckon
  5. To select for a special office, eg to the Bar
  6. To telephone
  7. To read out the names in (a roll)
  8. To demand the repayment of (a debt, loan, redeemable bonds, etc)
  9. To give the order for (a strike)
  10. To make a call (sport)
  11. To demand the playing of (an exposed card) (poker)
  12. To apply (an offensive name) to (informal)
  13. To broadcast a commentary on (a race, etc) (Aust and NZ)
  14. To transfer control to (a subroutine) (computing)
noun
  1. A summons or invitation (to the witness box, the telephone, the stage or rehearsal, etc)
  2. A sense of vocation
  3. A demand
  4. An act of waking someone
  5. A short visit
  6. A signal by trumpet, bell, etc
  7. A telephone connection or conversation, or a request for one
  8. Occasion, cause (informal)
  9. A declaration or undertaking, or the right to make it in turn (cards)
  10. A direction in square dancing
  11. A decision on the status of a shot, articulated by an umpire or (esp tennis) a line judge (sport)
  12. A cry, esp of a bird
  13. Admission to the rank of barrister
  14. An invitation to the pastorate of a congregation
  15. (also call option) an option of buying within a certain time certain securities or commodities at a stipulated price (stock exchange)
  16. The money paid to secure such an option
  17. One instalment of the payment for newly-issued securities
ORIGIN: OE ceallian and ON kalla

callˈer noun

callˈing noun

Vocation, an occupation or profession

call alarm noun

A small radio transmitter used, esp by elderly people living alone, to summon help in an emergency

callˈ-at-large noun

A form of pastoral call sometimes adopted by a presbytery where a congregation is not unanimous, in which the name of the person to be called is not inscribed beforehand, and the names cannot be adhibited by mandate

callˈ-back noun

  1. A return telephone call
  2. An act of recalling

callˈ-barring noun (telecommunications)

The ability to restrict outgoing telephone calls to certain numbers

callˈ-bird noun

A bird trained to lure others into snares by its call

callˈ-box noun

A public telephone-box

callˈ-boy noun

A boy who calls the actors when they are required on stage

call centre noun

A building where workers provide services to a company's customers by telephone

Caller ID noun

A facility which displays the telephone number of an incoming call

call gapping noun

A technique used to prevent congestion in telephone systems by limiting the number of calls that can pass through the network at any time

callˈ-girl noun

A prostitute who arranges appointments with clients by telephone

call house noun

A house of prostitution

calling card noun

  1. A visiting card
  2. Anything that reveals the identity of a person (figurative)

callˈing-crab noun

The fiddler crab, which waves its larger claw when disturbed

callˈ-loan or callˈ-money noun (finance)

A loan or money called in for repayment or payable when demanded

callˈ-note noun

The note by which a bird or animal calls to its own kind

call option noun (stock exchange) see n above.

call-out see call out below.

call sign or call signal noun (communications)

A combination of letters and numbers, identifying a particular ship, aircraft, transmitter, etc

callˈtime noun

  1. Time available for use in making calls on a mobile phone
  2. The time used on a single phone call

callˈ-up noun

An act of calling up, esp conscription into the armed forces

call waiting noun (telecommunications)

The ability to accept an incoming telephone call routed by another number while holding a call on one's own number

call attention to

To point out

call away

To divert the mind

call back

  1. To recall
  2. To visit again
  3. To telephone again

call by

To visit briefly in passing

call collect (N American)

To make a reverse-charge telephone call

call cousins

To claim kindred

call down

  1. To invoke
  2. To rebuke, reprove sharply and angrily (esp US informal)

call for

  1. To come for and take away with one
  2. To ask loudly for
  3. To demand
  4. To require (calledˈ-for required, necessary; not called for uncalled-for)

call forth

To evoke

call in

  1. To bring in from public use old currency notes, etc (banking)
  2. To demand repayment of (a debt, etc)
  3. To call to one's help (eg a doctor, the police)
  4. To withdraw from circulation
  5. To withdraw (eg an application)

call in on

To visit briefly and informally

call in (or into) question

To challenge, cast doubt on

call off

  1. To order to come away
  2. To withdraw or back out
  3. To cancel or abandon

call of nature (euphemistic)

A need to urinate or defecate

call on or upon

  1. To invoke, appeal to
  2. To make a short visit to

call out

  1. To challenge to fight, eg a duel
  2. To summon to service, bring into operation
  3. To instruct (members of a trade union) to come out on strike
  4. To request or arrange a visit (eg of a repairman, service engineer; callˈ-out noun and adjective)

call over

To read aloud (a list)

call round

To visit informally

call the shots (orig US) or call the tune

To say what is to happen, to order, or to be in command

call to account see under account

call to mind

To recollect, or cause to recollect

call to order

  1. To call upon (participants) to observe the rules of debate
  2. (of a chairman) to announce that a formal meeting is starting

call up

  1. To summon eg to a tribunal, to esp military service, or to memory
  2. To telephone
  3. To display (information, data, etc on a computer screen)

have first call on

To have the right to use (something) in preference to anyone else

it's your, his, etc call

It is up to you, him, etc to make a decision

on call

  1. Available if required
  2. Ready to answer a summons

pay a call (informal; euphemistic)

To go to the lavatory

within call

Within calling distance

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

随便看

 

英语词典包含305067条英英释义在线翻译词条,基本涵盖了全部常用单词的英英翻译及用法,是英语学习的有利工具。

 

Copyright © 2004-2022 Newdu.com All Rights Reserved
更新时间:2024/12/23 4:22:28