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  1. Dictionary
    Dis·or·der
    /dəˈsôrdər/

    noun

    verb

    • 1. disrupt the systematic functioning or neat arrangement of: "they are disordering the political landscape"
  2. Disorder refers to civil unrest or to any scene in which there is confusion or fighting: The police went to the scene of the disorder. A brawl is a noisy, unseemly quarrel, usually in a public place: a tavern brawl. A disturbance is disorder of a size as to inconvenience people: to cause a disturbance.

  3. disorder. noun. /dɪsˈɔːdə (r)/. /dɪsˈɔːrdər/. [countable, uncountable] (medical) a condition or illness that causes problems with the way part of the body or brain works. a blood/bowel disorder. He was diagnosed with an anxiety disorder. This is a rare disorder of the liver.

  4. 4 days ago · Disorder is a state of being untidy, badly prepared, or badly organized . The emergency room was in disorder. Inside all was disorder: drawers fallen out, shoes and boots scattered. Synonyms: untidiness, mess, confusion, chaos More Synonyms of disorder. 3.variable noun. Disorder is violence or rioting in public.

  5. Feb 17, 2022 · The DSM-5 defines a mental disorder as a syndrome that causes significant disturbance in behavior, emotion, and cognition. These disorders are also usually accompanied by significant distress that affects a person's work, school, and social relationships.

  6. Thesaurus. See disorder in the Oxford Advanced Learner's Dictionary. Check pronunciation: disorder. Definition of disorder noun in Oxford Advanced American Dictionary. Meaning, pronunciation, picture, example sentences, grammar, usage notes, synonyms and more.

  7. disorder noun (BAD BEHAVIOUR) uncontrolled, bad behaviour, especially by large groups of people: crime and disorder. disorder noun (NOT ORGANIZED) a situation in which things are untidy or confused and not organized: His financial affairs are in complete disorder. See also. eating disorder.

  8. 5 days ago · Also known as: insanity, madness, mental illness, psychiatric disorder. Written by. Andrew C.P. Sims. Professor of Psychiatry, University of Leeds, England; Honorary Consultant, St. James's University Hospital. Author of Symptoms in the Mind and others. Andrew C.P. Sims, Stuart C. Yudofsky.

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