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repertoire

noun

  1. set of prepared artistic pieces
L41885 on Wikidata ↗

Wiktionary

Pronunciation: /ˈɹɛp.ə.twɑː/ / /ˈɹɛp.əɹ.twɑɹ/ / /ˈɹɛp.ə.twɑɹ/

noun

Etymology: Borrowed from French répertoire, from Middle French repertoire, from Late Latin repertōrium (“an inventory, list, repertory”). Doublet of repertory.

  1. A list of dramas, operas, pieces, parts, etc., which a company or a person has rehearsed and is prepared to perform or display.

    The conjurer expanded his repertoire with some new tricks.

    When Bad Bunny took center stage for the 2026 Super Bowl LX halftime show on Sunday at Levi's Stadium in Santa Clara, California, the Puerto Rican artist made history as the first music star with a primarily Spanish-language repertoire to do so.

  2. The set of skills, abilities, experiences, etc., possessed by a person.
  3. The set of vocalisations used by a bird.
  4. An amount, body, or collection of something.
  5. A processor's instruction set.
  6. An abstract set of characters, independent of their encoding.

    ISO Latin 1 repertoire

    There is quite a jump from the WGL4 repertoire to the Unicode 2.0 repertoire, but there are few intermediate general purpose repertoires.