order Conodonta
— Noun
– English
~ extinct order of primitive vertebrates; the precise taxonomy is not clear; in some classifications considered a separate phylum
order Auriculariales
— Noun
– English
~ coextensive with the family Auriculariaceae; sometimes included in the order Tremellales
order Aphyllophorales
— Noun
– English
~ includes chiefly saprophytic fungi typically with shelflike bodies; sometimes placed in class Hymenomycetes or included in Agaricales
order Mycoplasmatales
— Noun
– English
~ coextensive with the family Mycoplasmataceae
order Columbiformes
— Noun
– English
~ sand grouse; pigeons; doves; extinct dodos and solitaires
order Lycoperdales
— Noun
– English
~ small order of basidiomycetous fungi having fleshy often globose fruiting bodies; includes puffballs and earthstars
order Cycadofilicales
— Noun
– English
~ fossil gymnospermous trees or climbing plants from the Devonian: seed ferns
order
— Noun
– English
~ established customary state (especially of society); "order ruled in the streets"; "law and order"
order Bryales
— Noun
– English
~ category used in some classification systems for mosses having the spore case separated from the capsule wall by a hollow intercellular space
order Coccidia
— Noun
– English
~ an order in the subclass Telosporidia
Orange Order
— Noun
– English
~ a Protestant political organization in Northern Ireland
order Heterotrichales
— Noun
– English
~ yellow-green algae with simple or branching filaments; comprising the single family Tribonemaceae
order Dictyoptera
— Noun
– English
~ in some classifications replaced by the orders (here suborders) Blattodea (cockroaches) and Manteodea (mantids); in former classifications often subsumed under a much broader order Orthoptera
order Marchantiales
— Noun
– English
~ liverworts with gametophyte differentiated internally
order Casuariiformes
— Noun
– English
~ a ratite bird order: cassowaries and emus
order Crocodylia
— Noun
– English
~ crocodiles; alligators; caimans; gavials
order Ginkgoales
— Noun
– English
~ coextensive with the family Ginkgoaceae: plants that first appeared in the Permian and now represented by a single surviving species; often included in Coniferales