Langimage
English

sequentially-arranged

|se-quen-tial-ly-ar-ranged|

B2

/sɪˈkwɛnʃəli əˈreɪndʒd/

ordered sequence

Etymology
Etymology Information

'sequentially-arranged' originates from the combination of 'sequentially' and 'arranged'. 'Sequentially' comes from the Latin 'sequentia', meaning 'sequence', and 'arranged' comes from the Old French 'arranger', meaning 'to set in order'.

Historical Evolution

'Sequentially' evolved from the Latin 'sequentia' through Middle English, while 'arranged' transformed from the Old French 'arranger' into the modern English 'arrange'.

Meaning Changes

Initially, 'sequentially' meant 'in a sequence', and 'arranged' meant 'set in order'. These meanings have largely remained the same in modern usage.

Meanings by Part of Speech

Adjective 1

organized in a specific order or sequence.

The books on the shelf were sequentially-arranged by publication date.

Synonyms

Antonyms

Last updated: 2025/04/14 21:02