0 the group of people who travel with and work for an important or famous person: --
1 the group of people who travel with and work for an important or famous person: --
Let me have two of the smartest monks in your own entourage, doing it in a way that will not let my people notice they are yours.
There is also sufficient evidence to show that each tomb had two uses: for multiple burials of the ruler and his entourage and for individual members of the royal family.
Elements of entourage, such as figures and vegetation, can be disproportionately expensive: a tree needs at least 2000 polygons, yet its detailed form is of no particular consequence.
Problems of montage and entourage are convincingly solved, as is the introduction of a much wider range of graphical techniques, and adaptability to many forms of printing.
Who was in his entourage?
Wallenstein's entourage of 900 was admittedly a flashy anomaly, but as among royal houses, size and extravagance were the surest signs of power and status.
Few medieval documents record meetings between two composers, notwithstanding their roles within their respective patrons' entourages.
Then the closure of an entourage is again an entourage.