repertoire

Etymology

From French répertoire, from Late Latin repertorium (“an inventory, list, repertory”), from Latin reperiō (“I find, find out, discover, invent”), from re- (“again”) + pariō (“I produce”). Doublet of repertory.

noun

  1. A list of dramas, operas, pieces, parts, etc., which a company or a person has rehearsed and is prepared to perform or display.
    Coordinate term: (analog for fine artist) portfolio
    The conjurer expanded his repertoire with some new tricks.
  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. (computing) A processor's instruction set.
  6. (computing) 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. 2006, Jukka K. Korpela, Unicode Explained, O'Reilly Media, page 39

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