Sortation?

From the American Heritage Dictionary, online;

They do have the definition, but no etymology.
So, where on earth did that come from? First I heard of it was checking on a package at FedEx. My package is at their “sortation facility” in San Pablo, CA.
Has this word been in general use forever, and I’ve been on the nod?
Peace,
mangeorge

No cite, but as far as I can tell, there are three common uses:

  1. A faux-impressive synonym for sorting, used by the same sort of person who commonly speaks of interfaces and paradigms. Or uses parameters with no sense of what the word really means.
  2. Sorting by automated, mechanical means. (“We bought a new sortation device.”)
  3. The methodology of sorting: (“First, sort the whole lot this way. Then sort each batch this other way. Etc.”)

This is a methodology for sorting, hence a sortation.

The OED has it as far back as 1844.

OED cites from 1844.

If you want to understand the etymology of the -ation suffix, enjoy.

–per the OED

My first reaction to the thread’s title was that the word “sortation” would relate to a random choice by lot.

How accurate is FedEx in its delivery practices? :slight_smile:

I don’t care. I prefer USPS regardless of the facts.

The huge USPS facility that uswd to be close to my work was named “The USPS Sort Facility”, IIRC. It for sure wasn’t any sortation anything.
I guess the word’s okay. I’ve just never heard it used.
Hell, I got used to “don’t go there”. Meaning, for anyone who doesn’t know, “don’t talk about that”.

I used to work in a warehouse with a “Sortation Desk” (an area where labels and packing slips were sorted for outbound product). I thought the word was fishy at first, but eventually I verified it in a dictionary and stopped smugly correcting all my coworkers.

I learned a long time ago not to smugly correct, generally.
Well, except for the Chevy Nova in Mexico myth and it’s ilk.
Generally, I ask. Hence this thread.