fulfil an order
1fulfil — ful‧fil [fʊlˈfɪl] , fulfill verb fulfilled PTandPP fulfilling PRESPART [transitive] 1. if a hope, promise etc is fulfilled, the thing that you had hoped for, promised etc happens or is done …
2order — / ɔ:də/ noun 1. an official request for goods to be supplied ● to give someone an order or to place an order with someone for twenty filing cabinets ♦ to fill an order or to fulfil an order to supply items which have been ordered ● We are so… …
3order — / ɔ:də/ noun 1. the way in which records such as filing cards or invoices are arranged ● in alphabetical or numerical order 2. an official request for goods to be supplied ● to give someone an order or to place an order with someone for twenty… …
4fulfil — /fυl fɪl/ verb to complete something in a satisfactory way ● The clause regarding payments has not been fulfilled. (NOTE: the American spelling is fulfill) ♦ to fulfil an order to supply the items which have been ordered ● We are so understaffed… …
5fulfil — /fυl fɪl/ verb to complete something in a satisfactory way ● The clause regarding payments has not been fulfilled. (NOTE: The US spelling is fulfill.) ♦ to fulfil an order to supply the items which have been ordered ● We are so understaffed that… …
6Order of the Phoenix (organisation) — Order of the Phoenix Harry Potter association Some Order of the Phoenix members in the Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix film adaptation, from left to right: Alastor Moody, Nymphadora Tonks, Sirius Black, Remus Lupin, and Albus Dumbledore …
7order — {{Roman}}I.{{/Roman}} noun 1 way in which people/things are arranged ADJECTIVE ▪ correct, proper, right ▪ wrong ▪ logical ▪ The paragraphs are not in a logical order …
8tall order — Something that is likely to be hard to achieve or fulfil is a tall order …
9make-to-order — /ˌmeɪk tυ ɔ:də/ noun the making of goods or components to fulfil an existing order (NOTE: Make to order products are made to the customer’s specification, and are often processed in small batches.) …
10tall order — Something that is likely to be hard to achieve or fulfil is a tall order. (Dorking School Dictionary) …