the entire range of skills or aptitudes or devices used in a particular field or occupation; "the repertory of the supposed feats of mesmerism"; "has a large repertory of dialects and characters"
{i} list of works that a person or group is ready to perform; collection of skills required for a particular profession; collection including all existing artistic works of a specific kind
The repertoire of a person or thing is all the things of a particular kind that the person or thing is capable of doing. Mike's impressive repertoire of funny stories
A performer's repertoire is all the plays or pieces of music that he or she has learned and can perform. Meredith D'Ambrosio has thousands of songs in her repertoire
A collection of learned dance works at a ready-to-perform level (See also movement vocabulary )
In the context of characters sets, the collection of characters represented by a character set Some character sets have open repertoires, in which new characters can be constructed; others have closed repertoires, which do not allow characters to be constructed from other characters Unicode is a closed repertoire character set, since new characters cannot be created Note that the operation of combining characters in Unicode does not have the effect of creating new characters; rather, combining characters are like composing words out of letters, they are simply a type of text element
() From French répertoire Late Latin repertorium (“an inventory, list, repertory”) Latin reperire (“to find, find out, discover, invent”) re- (“again”) + parire, usually parere (“to produce”).