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Orientate

Orientate is a verb with several related meanings centered on direction and familiarity. Primarily, it means to determine or establish the position or direction of something, or to align or position something relative to a reference point. It can also mean to familiarise someone with a new environment, system, or situation, i.e., to provide orientation.

Usage varies by dialect. In British English, orientate is commonly used and widely understood in its senses

Etymology traces orientate to the same root as orient and orientation, from Latin oriens meaning rising or

Typical contexts include giving someone spatial directions, aligning equipment or maps, or introducing newcomers to a

See also: orientation, orient, orienting.

of
determining
direction,
aligning,
or
familiarising.
In
American
English,
the
preferred
verb
is
usually
orient,
and
orientate
is
less
common;
some
style
guides
regard
it
as
redundant
or
less
preferred,
though
still
recognized
as
valid
in
many
contexts.
In
technical
or
formal
writing,
orient
can
be
favored
for
conciseness,
while
orientate
may
appear
in
training
programs
or
manuals
describing
processes
that
involve
both
orientation
and
alignment.
east,
with
the
-ate
suffix
forming
a
verb
in
English.
The
noun
orientation
and
the
adjective
oriental
share
the
same
root.
site
or
organization.
For
example,
one
might
orientate
a
new
employee
to
company
policies,
orientate
a
map
to
true
north,
or
orientate
a
person
to
local
customs.