Ordering in a sentence as a noun

Doctors get commissions from testing labs/pharmacies etc for ordering lab tests, medicines.

It is free with Prime membership and gives you further discounts if you subscribe to ordering baby stuff like formula, diapers etc.

We love amazon at my house and being Prime members, we are almost ordering everything under the sun from Amazon that we possibly can. Here is why we love it:- The reviews are actually useful.

In general, having strong control of the narrative structure of your speech without being wedded to the exact ordering of sentences is a good balance for most people.

Even with this rear-guard action in New Jersey, Teslas can be bought direct from the manufacturer just a short distance away or via remote ordering.

Amazon prime, their return policies, their streamlined ordering policies... at this point, ordering things from other websites has so much more friction that they just feel old.

That my wife finds ordering a bunch of clothing, trying stuff on at home, and returning what she doesn't want to be much more efficient makes me wonder what the future of retail clothing becomes.

I'm talking about the subtle fact that, among groups of people, women have the capability to exert a disproportionate influence on the status ordering.

Latin word order isn't fixed like English, so the ordering of words is a form of emphasis, and placing something in the final position, after the verb, is one of the strongest emphases possible.

It was hardly a project in itself to arrange for a small plastic sign to be made and glued.- Yes, Catering has people whose salaried, 40 hour a week job is to handle the logistics of food ordering, and predict supply and demand.

I came from a windows background, tinkered with Linux for a few years on and off, and when I started my current job I was given a Macbook Pro. After a few months of using it I as so frustrated, and found myself spending more and more time in my Ubuntu virtual machine, that when they were ordering new MBPs for the design team I offered to give mine up to a designer and buy a ThinkPad, thus saving the company over $1,000.

Partly it's because a lot of the stories are old news by the time they get past the editors, and they've already hit the front pages of HN, relevant subreddits, etc. Partly it's because the discussions are too big for a simple chronological ordering to really work and the system for filtering by moderation score doesn't seem to help much.

Here's a working hypothesis:| Why is Amazon's security for replacement orders so lax?Amazon values customer satisfiction above their fraud write-off.| Why would they send a replacement to an address that has never been associated with me, and is in a wholly different state than the one the original item was sent to?Because the time between ordering an item, and defect can be sufficiently large to cover moves: people shift around all the time.

Blacklisting them also wouldn't help this case: reshipping companies can easily buy up a handful of different addresses in a range of cities, making this a game of whack-a-mole.| Can I really trust this company to hold multiple credit card numbers of mine in their database, one click away from someone potentially ordering thousands of dollars of merchandise that they can apparently easily redirect to an address that should have been black-listed years ago, if there were any kind of sane security policy in place?Note that no credit card, or password database has been compromised in executing this attack.

Ordering definitions

noun

logical or comprehensible arrangement of separate elements; "we shall consider these questions in the inverse order of their presentation"

See also: order ordination

noun

the act of putting things in a sequential arrangement; "there were mistakes in the ordering of items on the list"

See also: order