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general order

American  

noun

Military.
  1. any one of a set of permanent orders from a headquarters establishing policy for a command or announcing official acts.

  2. any one of a set of permanent orders governing the duties and behavior of sentries on routine guard duty.


Etymology

Origin of general order

First recorded in 1865–70

Example Sentences

Examples are provided to illustrate real-world usage of words in context. Any opinions expressed do not reflect the views of Dictionary.com.

A spokesperson from the DWP said power poles are required to be clear from all obstructions according to General Order 95 of the California Public Utilities Commission.

From Los Angeles Times

A general order was issued, directing that “such unwarlike activity must cease.”

From Literature

We have a standing general order that requires pretty immediate reporting of crashes.

From Seattle Times

To spread the word about freedom, Granger and more than 2,000 Union soldiers marched to public buildings and even a church to read the General Order, No. 3., part of which declared:

From National Geographic Kids

But jurors found that Sergeant Smiley was guilty of one charge — violation of a general order that forbids drill instructors from calling recruits names, Mr. Vokey said.

From New York Times