No, order may be a verb, or a noun, with several disparate meanings. The past participle, ordered, can be used as an adjective.
Order is not an adjective. It's a noun, meaning a command. It's also a verb, meaning to command.
Orderless
The: article/adjective office: adjective copier: subject/noun is: linking verb frequently: adverb out: adjective of: preposition order: noun/ object of the preposition
Only if it is used as an adjective. EXAMPLES: The coat was made to order. It was a made-to-order coat.
The word order is a noun. However, it can also be a verb.
The word 'order' is a noun, a singular, common, abstract noun; the word 'sequential' is an adjective describing the noun order.
The adjective 'out of order' is where there is a noun being modified and a comma is inseted after the noun. EX: the man, grizzled and old (no second noun) Example: The baby alligators, small and weak, ride on their mommas head.
Organized can be used as a verb or an adjective. Verb: Zelma organized her CDs in alphabetical order. Adjective: She is an organized person.
The Inevitable student was trying to avoid the money order.
The word 'chronological' is an adjective. Only verbs have tenses.
Equilateral is an adjective, not a noun and so the question makes no sense. The order of rotation of an equilateral quadrilateral, such as a rhombus, is 1.
The word first *is* an adjective (number one in order, or primary) - e.g. his first car.Ordinal numbers such as first can also be nouns (e.g. a first, the first).