Ordíno, ôrdinas, pen. cor. ordinâre Sueton. To order or dispose to set in order, or rew.Ordinare & instituere.Cic. Aciem ordinare, Vide ACIES. Agmina ordinare in aliquem. Horat. Annos ordinare. Horat. Forsitan dij fata ita ordinauerunt. Curt. Perhaps the gods haue so disposed destinies. Litem ordinare. Cic.Ordinare syllabarum literas. Prisc. To spell.Ordinare locum vitibus. Colum. Ordinare milites.Liu.To ordaine souldiours.Partes orationis ordinare.Cic.To dispose partes of an oration. Res publicas ordinare. Horat. Ordinare Reip. statum. Suet. To set in good order the state of the commn weale.Ordinare vineam paribus interuallis. Colum. Ordinare. Suet. To aduaunce to promotion: to put in authoritie. lpsum candidatum sine mora ordinauit. Suet.
Lewis and Short: Latin dictionary
ordĭno, āvi, ātum, 1, v. a. [ordo], to order, set in order, arrange, adjust, dispose, regulate.I. In gen. (class.; syn.: dispenso, dispono): copias, Nep. Iph. 2, 2; so, milites, Liv. 29, 1: agmina, Hor. Epod. 17, 9; and: aciem, Just. 11, 9, 8: arbusta latius sulcis, Hor. C. 3, 1, 9: vineam paribus intervallis, Col. 3, 13: res suas suo arbitrio, Sen. Ep. 9, 14: partes orationis, Cic. Inv. 1, 14, 9: litem, id. de Or. 2, 10, 43: causam, Dig. 40, 12, 24: judicium, ib. 40, 12, 25: testamentum, ib. 5, 2, 2: bibliothecas, Suet. Gram. 21.—B.Transf.: cupiditates improbas,
to arrange
,
draw up in order of battle
, Sen. Ep. 10, 2: publicas res (= sunta/ttein, componere), to draw up in order, to narrate the history of public events, Hor. C. 2, 1, 10 (antiquitatem) totam in eo volumine exposuerit, quo magistratus ordinavit, i. e. recorded events according to the years of the magistrates, Nep. Att. 18, 1: cum omnia ordinarentur, Cic. Sull. 19, 53.—II. In partic. (post-Aug.). A.To rule, govern a country: statum liberarum civitatum, Plin. Ep. 8, 24, 7: Macedoniam, Flor. 2, 16: provinciam, Suet. Galb. 7: Orientem, id. Aug. 13.—B.To ordain, appoint to office: magistratus, Suet. Caes. 76: tribunatus, praefecturas, et ducatus,
to dispose of
,
give away
, Just. 30, 2, 5; so, filium in successionem regni, Just. 17, 1, 4.—Hence, C. (Eccl. Lat.) To ordain as a priest or pastor, to admit to a clerical office, Lampr. Alex. Sev. 45; Cassiod. Hist. Eccl. 9, 36; cf.: in ministerium sanctorum ordinaverunt se ipsos, Vulg. 1 Cor. 16, 15.—Hence, ordĭ-nātus, a, um, P. a., well ordered, orderly, ordained, appointed (class.): compositus ordinatusque vir, Sen. Vit. Beat. 8, 3: igneae formae cursus ordinatos definiunt,
perform their appointed courses
, Cic. N. D. 2, 40, 101.—Comp.: vita ordinatior, Sen. Ep. 74, 25: pars mundi ordinatior, Sen. Ira, 3, 6.—Sup.: meatus ordinatissimi, App. de Deo Socrat. p. 42.—Hence, adv.: ordĭnā-tē, in an orderly manner, in order, methodically (not in Cic. or Cæs.; cf. Krebs, Antibarb. p. 811; v. ordinatim): tamquam (astra) non possent tam disposite, tam ordinate moveri, Lact. 2, 5, 15: ordinate disponere, Auct. Her. 4, 56, 69 dub.—Comp.: ordinatius retractare, Tert. adv. Marc. 1, 19init.—Sup.: ordinatissime subjunxit, Aug. Retract. 1, 24.