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Ordering definition

Ordering means requisitioning and procuring tangible goods associated with the utility’s business.
Ordering means the sequence of steps involved in placing an order with a carrier.
Ordering means both asking for something and structuring the contents of it. In this way, “ordering” risks means both requiring the technology to show its risks and structuring these risks at the same time. Thus, “ordering” the risks is both ordering in the sense of asking for, and in the sense of structuring. The first meaning is expressed in the goals of risk assessment, namely forcing the risks into unconcealment; the second meaning is expressed in the way the result is presented: as a list of risks associated with probabilities and costs.

Examples of Ordering in a sentence

  • Ordering agencies shall provide at a minimum the contract number, ship to and bill to address, contract name and phone number.

  • Ordering activities shall use the ordering procedures of Federal Acquisition Regulation (FAR) 8.405 when placing an order or establishing a BPA for supplies or services.

  • Ordering activities shall follow FAR 8.405-3 when creating and implementing BPA(s).

  • Ordering agencies shall provide contract number, ship to and bill to address, contact name and phone number.

  • The prices quoted are those for which the material will be furnished F.O.B. Ordering Agency and include all charges that may be imposed during the period of the contract.


More Definitions of Ordering

Ordering shall be construed accordingly;
Ordering means the request for Products either by way of a script, Patient
Ordering. The minimum order for this Contract will be $100.00 per single delivery for each ordering agency within the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania. Orders less than the agency minimum may be accepted by mutual agreement between the Contractors and the Commonwealth. Agencies must provide 10 business days or more to the contractor from receipt of the order for lead-time on all orders. The price invoiced is the price at the time of order, not the price at time of delivery.
Ordering. The Order Email sets forth the initial Maintenance and Technical Support Services entitlement period for the Licensed Product (“Initial Support Period”). In the event that Company fails to activate the Program and Maintenance and Technical Support Services within six (6) months of the date of the Order Email, or allows a lapse in Maintenance and Technical Support Services for any period of time, Customer’s entitlement to Maintenance and Technical Support Services shall terminate. During any such period, Superna may, in its sole discretion, elect to provide Company limited Technical Support Services on an “as is” basis with no service level commitment and no access to those Maintenance and Technical Support Services described in Section 9.2. In the event of any failure to activate the Licensed Program, in accordance with Section 2.3, or lapse of Maintenance and Technical Support Services as contemplated by this Section 9.1, Superna may require Company to acquire any Update or Upgrade by paying the then-current Licensed Program Fee for including Maintenance and Technical Support Services. Upon receipt of such payment, Superna will issue a new license key for the Licensed Program Maintenance and Technical Support Services to Company which will include the Authorized Use Limitation and the Maintenance and Technical Support Services entitlement period.
Ordering means a person in a position of authority using that authority to instruct another to commit an offence. ICTR, Akayesu, (Trial Chamber) 2 September 1998, 483; ICTR, Rutaganda, (Trial Chamber) 6 December 1999, 39; ICTR, Gacumbitsi, (Appeals Chamber) 7 July 2006, 181-183. See also article 25(3)(b) of the Rome Statute of the International Criminal Court.
Ordering means the process of a Customer requesting products to be prepared by the Restaurant for the Customer to purchase, with the expectation by Customer and Restaurant that Customer will remit payment for said products.
Ordering a journal no longer means simply agreeing to pay a publisher or vendor a set price for a set number of physical products. As Claire Dygert asserts in “New Challenges Behind the Scenes: the Changing Role of the Serials Librarian in the Age of E-Publishing,” “because of several unique properties of digital information, agreements that govern the acquisition and maintenance of traditional paper collections are inadequate in the digital information context” (10).