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 repertoire ['rɛpɚ`twɑr]   添加此单词到默认生词本
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    repertoire
    [ noun ]
    1. the entire range of skills or aptitudes or devices used in a particular field or occupation

    2. <noun.group>
      the repertory of the supposed feats of mesmerism
      has a large repertory of dialects and characters
    3. 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

    4. <noun.group>


    1. Conducting the BBC Welsh Symphony, Tadaki Otaka was freshly attentive to everything. The longest piece was Max Bruch's G minor violin concerto, which has been fading from the repertoire since the Second World War.
    2. "That's a standard in some European houses that the Met has managed to avoid _ the attitude that in the standard repertoire everybody knows how it goes.
    3. He expanded his repertoire last month after returning from a vacation that included a train ride from Chicago to Seattle during which he heard a club-car attendant recite poetry as part of his announcement he was closing the bar.
    4. The concerto repertoire is so much wider; the virtuoso opportunities so eye-catching, if the competitor chooses a big, romantic piece.
    5. At least some of his music - notably the majestic "See, See the Word is Incarnate" - has been continuously in the English cathedrals' repertoire for more than three centuries.
    6. Joint planning meetings have been held to prevent an overlap of repertoire.
    7. She enjoyed a successful concert career and recorded widely in the Italian repertoire, especially works by Verdi and Puccini.
    8. Instead of slipping them into the repertoire one a week, as might be expected, the company premiered three with a flourish on the same night, Saturday, at the Metropolitan Opera House.
    9. And in a series of meetings around the state, he demonstrated a political repertoire he's destined to employ in the thicket inside the Capitol.
    10. Yuri Grigorovich ignored her from the moment he took charge at the Bolshoi in 1964, so she was forced to create a repertoire for herself.
    11. "It's an area of great promise that essentially is obliterated from the American repertoire."
    12. Polemical diatribes are part of Castro's repertoire, but not Gorbachev's.
    13. On the same label are three discs of Mozart symphonies by the Vienna Philharmonic under James Levine, whose muscular way with this repertoire is equally convincing, though I don't always agree with the way he puts that muscle to use.
    14. Dukakis described his debate repertoire in baseball lingo, as well, saying he would use a "fastball, curve, slider _ maybe a knuckler" during his 90 minutes on stage.
    15. They are the object of admiration for their efforts to bring the arts to the hinterlands, and the target of complaints by some performers and critics for their entrenched conservatism regarding repertoire.
    16. One of the biggest voices in opera tackles one of the most shocking roles in the repertoire with the release of Jessye Norman's new recording of Richard Strauss's Salome (Philips).
    17. This has been especially true since Mr. Norrington spearheaded the move into the 19th-century repertoire, tackling Schubert, Berlioz and Wagner.
    18. He has avoided the core classical repertoire, exposing himself only in 20th century scores which show his analytical grasp and communication skills to advantage.
    19. Never mind that Ms. Te Kanawa has never been at home in the French repertoire.
    20. Slower tempos and acoustic guitars are showing up in the Replacements repertoire.
    21. In 1981, Mr. De Staebler added bronze to his repertoire because it enabled him "to defy gravity in ways that clay wouldn't permit."
    22. In fact, Ms. Anderson's real talent may lie more as an interpretive artist than a creative one, and one could imagine something spectacular if, say, an opera company turned her and her technology loose on a production of a standard repertoire opera.
    23. Their repertoire is limited, but a few routines are popular enough to prompt requests from parade-goers.
    24. The duo-pianist sisters Labeque, Katia and Marielle, are irrepressible musicians, and for some time now they have shown signs of frustration with the two-piano repertoire.
    25. The company's repertoire is equally intriguing, featuring a number of works by Latin American choreographers, many set to music by Brazilian composers or inspired by Brazilian themes.
    26. Naturally, they're dancing to the two duets that, with "Blue Moon," make up most kids' entire piano repertoire: "Heart and Soul" and "Chopsticks."
    27. Young Czech conductors and singers are focusing on popular repertoire which will bring them foreign engagements and easy money.
    28. The most challenging part of her job is revising her repertoire of boutiques stay current. "I'm on the streets so much, I spot new places before the French fashion magazines do," she said.
    29. The U.S. military barred the media from covering Hope's shows, saying his repertoire "could be exploited by the Iraqis for propaganda purposes," but Hope delivered some of his patois at a news conference on Tuesday morning.
    30. He is also a regular visitor to Berlin, where he offers characteristically unusual repertoire.
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