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单词 repertoire
释义

repertoiren.

Brit. /ˈrɛpətwɑː/, U.S. /ˈrɛpə(r)ˌtwɑr/
Forms: 1800s– répertoire, 1800s– repertoire.
Origin: A borrowing from French. Etymon: French répertoire.
Etymology: < French répertoire (1468 in Middle French in sense ‘index, list, inventory’; 1769 in sense 2; 1825 in sense 3; 1458 in sense ‘body of transmitted knowledge’; end of the 14th cent. in Repertoire de Science allegorical personification of knowledge) < classical Latin repertōrium repertory n. Compare earlier repertorium n., repertory n.
1. Scottish. An index, a catalogue. Cf. repertory n. 1. Obsolete. rare.
ΘΚΠ
society > communication > record > list > [noun]
tableOE
scorec1325
billa1340
calendar?a1400
legendc1400
librarya1450
Ragmanc1450
Ragman rollc1450
cataloguea1464
repertory1542
scrowa1545
bedroll?1552
roll1565
file1566
state1582
inventory1589
brief1600
series1601
counter-roll1603
list1604
muster roll1605
cense1615
pinax1625
repertoirec1626
diagram1631
recensiona1638
repertorium1667
vocabulary1694
albe1697
enumeration1725
screed1748
album1753
tableau1792
roll-call1833
shopping list1923
laundry list1958
remainder list1977
c1626 H. Bisset Rolment Courtis (1922) II. 275 Quhairunto the samin repertoir is relative.
2. A stock of dramatic or musical pieces which a company or performer has prepared or is accustomed to play; a person's stock of parts, tunes, songs, etc.
ΘΚΠ
society > leisure > the arts > music > piece of music > [noun] > repertoire
repertory1797
repertoire1819
society > leisure > the arts > performance arts > drama > a play > [noun] > repertoire
repertory1797
repertoire1819
summer stock1884
1803 F. W. Blagdon Paris as it Was II. liii. 193 The repertoire (or list of pieces which are here played habitually, or have been acted with applause) is amazingly well furnished, and does infinite honour to French literature.]
1819 Guardian 16 May 2/4 Corneille and Racine..are not in the repertoire of Monsieur Almack.
1850 W. M. Thackeray Pendennis II. xv. 146 Warrington, who..had but one tune..in his répertoire,..sat rapt in delight.
1885 J. K. Jerome On Stage 124 I got hold of the répertoire and studied up all the parts I knew I should have to play.
1903 Town & Country 9 May 31 (advt.) It is a home orchestra, whose repertoire consists of..Overtures, waltzes, ragtimes [etc.].
1969 K. Tynan Let. 8 May (1994) vi. 449 He didn't want permanent associate directors, since he felt they might fill the repertoire with plays that just happened to suit their directorial talents.
2007 D. Wittry Beyond Baton vi. 154 During the early spring you should gather information regarding possible guest artists and begin to select the repertoire.
3. In extended use: a stock or range of regularly performed or easily exhibited skills, techniques, abilities, etc.; a collection of typical features.
ΘΚΠ
the mind > possession > supply > storage > [noun] > that which is stored or a store > personal stock of behaviour, words, jokes, etc.
repertoire1844
1844 Brit. & Foreign Rev. 17 510 A bully, a sailor, a nurse, and a chaplain, and the repertoire is complete.
1872 E. Braddon Life in India vi. 201 A Lascar crossing-sweeper whose native dialect is Bengali or Tamil, and from whose linguistic répertoire Oordoo and Hindoo have been wholly omitted.
1959 Good Food Guide 211 Latest additions to his marvellous repertoire are Honey Duck..and a poussin stuffed with mushroom butter and herbs.
1971 Nature 13 Aug. 443/2 The most striking aspects of an animal's behavioural repertoire are often the ‘displays’ it gives in sexual or aggressive encounters.
2007 B. Kingsolver Animal, Veg., Miracle ix. 129 With a basic repertoire of unfussy recipes in your head, the better part of valor is just turning on the burner and giving it a shot.

Compounds

General attributive, as repertoire list, repertoire opera, repertoire piece, repertoire play, etc.
ΚΠ
1864 B. Lumley Reminisc. Opera ix. 89 Amid this cluster of established répertoire operas, two novelties endeavoured to raise their heads.
1874 Times 22 Oct. 4/5 The repertoire plays and operas which do not draw.
1897 Daily News 15 Sept. 6/4 A sound repertoire company, where too many plays are not embarked upon, and yet the so necessary variety is not wanting.
1910 J. G. Robertson in Cambr. Hist. Eng. Lit. V. xii. 315 From the evidence of the répertoire lists,..we are able to say with certainty that..Titus Andronicus, Hamlet, King Lear, Romeo and Juliet and the Merchant of Venice were played in some form on the continent.
1924 Amer. Mercury Sept. 122/2 If anyone will start such a repertoire theatre going, I volunteer to serve gratis as a press-agent.
1964 Jrnl. Amer. Folklore 77 284 Common repertoire pieces like ‘Devil's Dream’ and ‘Bonaparte's March’.
2004 Philadelphia Inquirer 13 June h 2/3 Is there a specific repertoire niche for this music director and orchestra to fill, the way Sawalisch and the orchestra created great synergy with Strauss?
This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, December 2009; most recently modified version published online March 2022).
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