Choreography is the inventing of steps and movements for ballets and other dances. the art of arranging how dancers should move during a performance (choréographie, from choreia (from choros; CHORUS) + -graphie ). Art of creating and arranging dances. The word is derived from the Greek for "dance" and "write," reflecting its early meaning as a written record of dances. By the 19th century the term was used mainly for the creation of dances, and the written record became known as dance notation. In the 16th century dance masters at the French court arranged their social dances into specific patterns. In the 17th century such dances became more complex and were performed as theatrical ballets by trained professionals. In the late 18th century Jean-Georges Noverre and Gasparo Angiolini introduced choreography that combined expressive mime and dance steps to produce the dramatic ballet. This was further developed in 19th-century Romantic ballets by Marius Petipa, Jules Perrot, and August Bournonville. Radical change in the 20th century began with choreographers of the Ballets Russes, including Michel Fokine and Léonide Massine, and continued with George Balanchine, Martha Graham, Frederick Ashton, Jerome Robbins, Merce Cunningham, and Twyla Tharp. See also Alvin Ailey; Agnes de Mille; Serge Lifar; Bronislava Nijinska; Salvatore Viganò
The specification of the ordering of messages from one node's perspective or a collection of nodes May or may not include Turing complete logic in determination of the message exchange pattern @@@ Definition in progress: the above definition was the original proposal
Systematically using different places in your training areas for different kinds of training behavior For example, standing or sitting in a different position for delivering input, setting up an exercise, taking and answering questions, recounting stories, etc This sets up spatial anchors for the group
1 The art of planning and arranging dance movements into a meaningful whole; the process of building a dance composition 2 A finished dance work or work-in-progress
1 The process of making a dance which involves the understanding of choreographic principles, processes, and structures 2 The product that results from the process of choreography