What's the difference between preorder and reorder?
Preorder
Definition:
(v. t.) To order to arrange beforehand; to foreordain.
Example Sentences:
(1) PwC has advised those who paid for the preorder with a credit card to contact their card issuer, which can be liable to make a refund under Section 75 of the Consumer Credit Act.
(2) Initially PwC had said customers who had preordered the phones would be entitled to cancel their order and receive a full refund.
(3) For the Apple customers who had preordered their new iPhones through Phones 4u before the administrators were called in, the news that they are just casualties of the broader phone market won't be much compensation.
(4) The company has just completed preorders and will now sell Laserlights through Evans Cycles shops in the UK as well as through its own website.
(5) Before the launch, China Unicom had had 300,000 preorders for the device, compared with the 200,000 it had for the iPhone 4S in January.
(6) The media lapped it up, as did consumers, who preordered Tesla’s home battery solution, Powerwall, in droves.
(7) Laserlights were shipped to preorders in January this year.
(8) Customers who preordered Apple’s iPhone 6 through Phones 4u before it collapsed have been told they will not receive a refund.
(9) What these people are waiting for is the launch of the epic online sci-fi adventure Destiny , the biggest, most costly to make video game, the most preordered piece of entertainment software in history.
(10) Therefore customers who have preordered an iPhone 6 through Phones 4U will not receive their purchase,” it said.
(11) In fact, there's a game store here having a midnight launch for PS4 but not Xbox One due to low preorders.
(12) "I will be cancelling my preorder, I will not make games with the Rift, and I am not associating myself with a Facebook affiliated company."
(13) The retailer had allowed people to preorder the devices on its site until it was forced to close after mobile phone networks withdrew their businessfrom the company.
(14) An updated version of WikiLeaks: Inside Julian Assange's War On Secrecy can be preordered for £5.99 (RRP £7.99) at guardianbookshop.co.uk .
(15) Neither a specific preordering of axons in the retinotectal pathway nor activity-dependent axon-target interactions are required for appropriate axonal targeting.
Reorder
Definition:
(v. t.) To order a second time.
Example Sentences:
(1) The aberrant conformation is evidently forced upon the abbreviated constructs by the residual 5' precursor sequence, since its removal by the maturation endonuclease RNAase M5 precipitates the reordering of the mature domain into its native conformation.
(2) cAMP-mediated stimulation of Cl- secretion in the human intestinal cell line T84 is accompanied by significant remodeling of F-actin, and both the secretory and cytoskeletal responses may be largely ablated by previous cell loading with phalloidin derivatives, reagents that prevent dynamic reordering of microfilaments (1991.
(3) Months of political haggling will now begin as the nation is drastically reordered.
(4) A specific phase-encode-reordering algorithm provides convenient manipulation of T2 weighting, yielding partial suppression of short T2 species like muscle water.
(5) In ordering clinical laboratory tests to confirm a presumptive diagnosis, optometrists will be held to a medical standard of care with respect to the interpretation of results, the prompt communication of results to patients, and the reordering of tests that have produced questionable or incorrect findings.
(6) Punched cards containing information on the drug are stored with the medication and are used for billing and reordering purposes.
(7) The latter two methods reorder the data acquisition to destroy the coherence of the motion.
(8) In order to meet growing demands for health service with improved access, cost controls, and increased productivity, it will be necessary to reorder the current system of providing these services.
(9) The objective function is the sum of the elements of the difference distance matrix between the two molecules generated by continual reordering of one molecule.
(10) However, for subsecond imaging, reordered phase encoding produced improved image contrast over that of standard turboFLASH, and segmented k-space imaging gave superior tissue contrast compared with that of both standard and reordered turboFLASH, with imaging time that permits breath-hold studies.
(11) Melodies transformed by a reordering of component tones were no less discriminable than those transformed by the addition of novel frequencies.
(12) Hypotrichs are a large group of ciliate species that cut, splice, reorder and eliminate DNA sequences to an extraordinary extent during their sexual life cycle.
(13) The morphology and density of neurons in the cerebellum, caudate nucleus, olfactory mitral stratum, and neocortical layer II suggest that there exists an initial delay in development in the frugivorous bat; through subsequent reordering, however, it becomes more advanced in development, in accordance with the more progressive status of the adult forms in its category.
(14) The coded auditory input did not effect changes in duration relative to the decoded and ambient auditory information as subjects were able to reorder the coded information.
(15) It is a city that has always been in flux, so complicated by its histories and counter-histories that its urban fabric seems to resist all attempts to reorder it.
(16) In addition, the paperwork required for reordering drugs is produced automatically.
(17) Each sentence was presented individually with the words in jumbled order and patients were asked to reorder them to produce a gramatically correct sentence.
(18) willing One finds in these patients a readiness to reorder priorities and a willingness to examine and make the most of their lives, and psychotherapy can therefore become an opportunity for positive change rather than just support for a medical catastrophe.
(19) FSE images of the liver-metastasis phantom were acquired with various phase-encode reordering schemes to manipulate T2 contrast.
(20) The fast acquisition interleaved spin-echo (FAISE) method is a partial RF echo-planar technique which utilizes a specific phase-encode reordering algorithm to manipulate image contrast (Melki et al., J. Magn.