ordinance
noun
- sacred rite among Latter-Day Saints
Wiktionary
Pronunciation: /ˈɔːdɪnəns/ / /ˈɔːdnəns/ / /ˈoɹdɪnəns/
noun
Etymology: From Middle English ordinaunce (ca. 1300), from Old French ordenance (“decree, command”) (modern French ordonnance), from Medieval Latin ordinantia, from ordinans, the present participle of ordino (“put in order”) (whence ordain). Doublet of ordonnance.
- A local law, passed by e.g. a city.
“Enactive. Expositive. / Art. 57. XIII 2. The Registrative, or say Recordative: exercised, by the arrangements and operations, by which, in conformity to corresponding ordinances and mandates, the accounts, given at different periods by the exercise of the statistic function, are kept in contiguity, and in a regular series, for the purpose of reference and comparison.”
“According to the weatherperson, spring arrived in Hartford, Conn., on Monday, March 20 at 6:34 p.m. But gay people here didn't need a weatherperson to feel the gust of fresh air at a hearing on the proposed gay rights ordinance before the City Council that night at 7:30.”
- An edict or decree, authoritative order.
- An edict or decree, authoritative order.
- An edict or decree, authoritative order.
- An edict or decree, authoritative order.
- A religious practice or ritual prescribed by a church.
- Alternative form of ordnance (“military equipment, especially artillery”).
“Let all the Battlements their Ordinance fire, / The King shal drinke to Hamlets better breath,”
“[T]he ſayd gunnes beeing able to hurt but a ſmall diſtance off, and the Iaponians being furniſhed with bꝛazen oꝛdinance vnknowen vnto the Corayans, they pꝛeſently dꝛaue them from their walles, […]”