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Definition of orient verb from the Oxford Advanced Learner's Dictionary

orient

verb
 
/ˈɔːrient/
 
/ˈɔːrient/
(also orientate)
Verb Forms
present simple I / you / we / they orient
 
/ˈɔːrient/
 
/ˈɔːrient/
he / she / it orients
 
/ˈɔːrients/
 
/ˈɔːrients/
past simple oriented
 
/ˈɔːrientɪd/
 
/ˈɔːrientɪd/
past participle oriented
 
/ˈɔːrientɪd/
 
/ˈɔːrientɪd/
-ing form orienting
 
/ˈɔːrientɪŋ/
 
/ˈɔːrientɪŋ/
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  1. [usually passive] orient somebody/something (to/towards somebody/something) to direct somebody/something towards something; to make or adapt somebody/something for a particular purpose
    • Our students are oriented towards science subjects.
    • policies oriented to the needs of working parents
    • We run a commercially oriented operation.
    • Neither of them is politically oriented (= interested in politics).
  2. orient yourself to find your position in relation to everything that is around or near you
    • The mountaineers found it hard to orient themselves in the fog.
  3. orient yourself to make yourself familiar with a new situation
    • It took him some time to orient himself in his new school.
  4. compare disorientate
    Word Originlate Middle English: via Old French from Latin orient- ‘rising or east’, from oriri ‘to rise’.
See orient in the Oxford Advanced American DictionarySee orient in the Oxford Learner's Dictionary of Academic English

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