noun
- the act of issuing an order that cancels or reverses a previous order
Usage: often used in military, business, or administrative contexts
verb
- to issue an order that cancels or reverses a previous order
Usage: present participle of counterorder
Examples
- The general issued a counterordering of the retreat, commanding troops to hold their positions.
- Counterordering the shipment saved the company from receiving unwanted inventory.
- The manager was counterordering the previous directive due to new information.
- Without proper authorization, counterordering a direct command can result in disciplinary action.
- The CEO's counterordering of the merger surprised investors and analysts.
- She received a counterordering memo that changed the project deadline.