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Discover Ludwig"had no order" is grammatically correct and can be used in written English.
It means that there was no organization or structure in a particular situation. Example: The books on the shelf had no order, making it difficult for me to find the one I needed. In this example, "had no order" is describing the lack of organization in the arrangement of the books on the shelf.
Exact(1)
A downgrade also occurred if the protocol specified primary outcome(s) but the same outcomes listed in the review had no order of importance.
Similar(56)
"We had no orders to kill," Mr. Gashey says.
"We had no orders or plans to occupy Baghdad," Blount says.
There was a shoe factory, but it had no orders and went bankrupt.
"For the first four years we had no orders," he said.
But they struggle to find enough work -- last year they had no orders for six months -- and against escalating rents.
They said there was no plan and they had no orders and told us to stay where we are and wait.
One report quoted a local customs official at the frontier saying he had no orders to allow the relief through untaxed.
But as so often happens at these checkpoints, the reserve soldiers had no orders, and spent most of their time trying to push back an increasingly desperate throng.
There were some 60,000 American and NATO troops in Bosnia, but the soldiers had no orders to arrest indicted Bosnians, for fear of inciting local rebellion.
Airbus's A330 took 15 years to hit the heights and had no orders in 1994, six years after its launch.
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Since I tried Ludwig back in 2017, I have been constantly using it in both editing and translation. Ever since, I suggest it to my translators at ProSciEditing.

Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com