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Ordonane

Ordonane is a term with little standing in contemporary usage and does not appear as a recognized word in major English dictionaries or standard reference works. In published writing, ordonane most often surfaces as a misspelling or variant of related terms such as ordonnance (French) or ordnance (military stores and weapons), or as a coined neologism in fictional or speculative contexts.

Etymology and variants: The closest cognates come from French ordonnance, meaning an order, arrangement, or prescription;

Usage and meanings: In non-fiction usage, ordonane has no stable definition. Some historical or bibliographic records

See also: ordonnance, ordnance, ordination, order.

Notes: If you encounter ordonane in a text, consult the primary source for the intended sense, as

from
Latin
ordinare,
to
arrange.
The
spelling
ordonane
may
reflect
deviations
from
these
roots
or
transcription
errors
in
historical
manuscripts,
contributing
to
its
irregular
attestation.
list
it
as
a
variant
form
of
ordonnance,
though
such
references
are
scarce.
In
fiction,
authors
may
introduce
ordonane
as
a
proper
name,
a
concept
denoting
a
hierarchical
order,
or
an
artifact
within
a
fictional
universe,
rather
than
as
an
established
term
with
a
fixed
meaning.
the
term
lacks
an
established,
widely
accepted
meaning
in
English.