0 present participle of arrange --
1 to plan, prepare for, or organize something: --
[ + question word ] We haven't yet arranged when to meet.
[ + that ] I'd deliberately arranged that they should arrive at the same time.
[ + to infinitive ] They arranged to have dinner the following month.
I'm trying to arrange my work so that I can have a couple of days off next week.
2 to put a group of objects in a particular order: --
His books are neatly arranged in alphabetical order.
Who arranged these flowers so beautifully?
3 to make changes to a piece of music so that it can be played in a different way, for example by a particular instrument: --
It will be simpler just to allow this interference, by arranging the typing rule so that x is set additively apart from other identifiers.
The delay in arranging for the first pregnancy test will, for the most part, be the woman's responsibility.
Probably those inns served as intermediaries when litigants were arranging for appeals to higher courts.
The overseers also offered other types of relief : finding employment and arranging for family registration, child care and health care.
Its practitioners regard it as an art of arranging one's life in harmony with the energies of the universe.
When conceptualising managerial care, it is therefore important that it is not seen as solely arranging formal services.
There were parallel concerns that in the course of enquiring about and arranging care, a user or carer may see several different people.
With the 'street' and the 'hub' established as principles, arranging the functional adjacencies around them becomes like solving a puzzle.