order of the day
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English
[edit]Noun
[edit]order of the day (plural orders of the day)
- The business to be done by a body (such as a legislature) on a particular day; an agenda.
- 1808, From the Journals of the House of Assembly of Lower Canada, during the Hart affair; Proceedings Relating to the Expulsion of Ezekiel Hart from the House of Assembly of Lower Canada
- The order of the day for the House to resolve into a Committee of the whole, to take into further consideration, the petition of Ezekiel Hart, Esquire, being read.
- 1808, From the Journals of the House of Assembly of Lower Canada, during the Hart affair; Proceedings Relating to the Expulsion of Ezekiel Hart from the House of Assembly of Lower Canada
- (figurative) The most significant aspect of something; what is necessary or appropriate.
- White tie and tails are the order of the day.
- 1935 January 4, Franklin D. Roosevelt, Second State of the Union Address:
- Throughout the world, change is the order of the day.
- 1987 July 18, Ronald Reagan, Presidential Radio Address:
- The ranks of political prisoners swelled into the thousands, and beatings, torture, and official murder became the order of the day.
- 2023 February 8, Greg Morse, “Crossing the border... by Sleeper”, in RAIL, number 976, page 42:
- I'm not in the mood for whisky, nor beer. Something soft would be sensible, but I decide that wine is the order of the day - a sauvignon blanc, which I take with a few olives.
- (military) The general directive of a commander in chief or the specific instructions of a commanding officer.
Translations
[edit]business to be done by a body on a particular day — see also agenda
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