[
UK
/ɹˈɛpətwˌɑː/
]
[ US /ˈɹɛpɝtˌwɑɹ/ ]
[ US /ˈɹɛpɝtˌwɑɹ/ ]
NOUN
-
the entire range of skills or aptitudes or devices used in a particular field or occupation
has a large repertory of dialects and characters
the repertory of the supposed feats of mesmerism - a collection of works (plays, songs, operas, ballets) that an artist or company can perform and do perform for short intervals on a regular schedule
How To Use repertoire In A Sentence
- These works have subsequently become the most widely performed and appreciated in the Boyce repertoire.
- The band then romp through three road songs that most people would die for to have in their repertoire, each single one would get people leaping about on the dance floor at a college hop.
- Hard graft and study of the score allowed him to master a wide repertoire without nationality kinships questioning his ability to conduct music from all periods.
- Mathieson's legacy to folklore included not only his own extensive oral repertoire of folksong but a manuscript collection of 545 songs written down in 3 huge ledgers as he heard them through the years, beginning as a schoolboy and continuing in the bothies, chaulmers and farm kitchens where he feed as a farm servant. Noo I'm a Young Man Cut Down in My Prime
- While she has a broad repertoire, her infectious exuberance and natural athleticism give her a distinctive edge in leotard ballets and soubrette parts.
- It meant participation in an expanding repertoire of domestic rituals made possible by creamware teacups and saucers, decanters, wine glasses, pickle plates, and forks of all sorts.
- An indigenized cultural pattern is integrated into the artistic repertoire of the host society, and, as a consequence, it is not felt to be ‘alien’ anymore.
- The tour repertoire, not finalized at press time, is expected to include Giselle and Coppelia.
- It has been well said that to exclude the voice from pre-classical music would lose us most of the repertoire.
- Born in Australia, Young first came to prominence in Germany and is familiar in the UK to audiences at Covent Garden, where her interpretations of the mainstream repertoire have been variable.