reordering
/riˈɔrdərɪŋ/
verb
- To put something in a different order or sequence.
- The teacher reordered the students' seats to reduce distractions.
- She is reordering the books on the shelf by genre.
- He reordered the playlist to start with slower songs.
- To request something again, especially by placing a new order for a product or service.
- They reordered supplies after running out of paper.
- I'm reordering the same coffee beans I bought last month.
- The store is reordering more copies of the popular game.
noun
- The act of putting things in a new order or sequence.
- A quick reordering of the files saved us a lot of time.
- The reordering of the schedule caused some confusion.
- The reordering of the chapters made the book easier to follow.
- The act of placing a new order for something.
- The reordering of inventory happens automatically when stock is low.
- She set up a monthly reordering system for office supplies.
- The reordering of the spare parts took two weeks.