0 all the music or plays, etc. that you can do or perform or that you know: --
1 all the music, plays, dances, operas, etc., that a person or a group can perform, or that exist in a particular type of activity related to the arts: --
In this respect, they are quite different from communication systems based on a limited repertoire of stereotyped messages.
The latter consists of a large repertoire of cereals and pulses which have remained largely unchanged over the centuries.
This fast switching exhausts the var gene repertoire resulting in short infection periods.
As a result, it is widely believed that the actual and potential site recognition repertoires of homing endonucleases are extremely broad.
In the processes of composition and editing the speaker arranges, qualifies, withholds, or releases verbal behavior which already exists in some strength in his repertoire.
The recorded repertoire was now changing, and the proportion of popular music increased considerably after 1908.
How complex a cultural repertoire could possibly ratchet up, without primate manual dexterity?
Although they may soon develop a considerable repertoire, such children's musicianship often remains restricted.