0 to arrange or write a piece of music so that it can be played by an orchestra
1 to arrange something carefully, and sometimes unfairly, so as to achieve a wanted result:
2 to plan and organize something carefully and sometimes secretly in order to achieve a desired result:
3 to arrange or write a piece of music to be played by an orchestra
4 to organize something complicated, in a very careful and sometimes secret way, especially in order to get an advantage for yourself:
Senior executives orchestrated a business strategy that tripled the size of the company.
The mega-bucks deals orchestrated by the club's billionaire owner continue to dominate the headlines.
be orchestrated to do sth She claims that contributions from her firm are not orchestrated to gain influence with a specific lawmaker.
We are not confronted by a set of pitch relations which are then ' orchestrated'.
Imagine if there were a handful of other reviews orchestrated to answer other compelling questions.
Is it a chance vestige of the sequence of events in early mammalian divergence, or it is orchestrated by something deeper?
Here she creates and orchestrates with her voice an entire instrumental and polyphonic world of subtle, interwoven sounds, simply by working with a multi-track recorder.
Consequently, every "single" publication orchestrates a whole chorus of conflicting voices.
Such intensely private inspiration can lend even the most extravagantly orchestrated piece a chamber-like intimacy.
If one heralded the dawn of political modernization, the other orchestrated a traditionalist resistance to it.
Elementary actions are orchestrated both in space and over time.