From Longman Dictionary of Contemporary EnglishRelated topics: Performingrepertoirerep‧er‧toire /ˈrepətwɑː $ -pərtwɑːr/●くろまる○しろまる○しろまる noun [countable usually singular]1APall the plays, pieces of music etc that a performer or group knows and can performin somebody’s repertoireThe group include some techno in their repertoire.repertoire ofa wide repertoire of songs2ALL/EVERYTHINGthe total number of things that someone or something is able to dothe behavioural repertoire of infantsExamples from the Corpusrepertoire• A self is a repertoire of behavior appropriate to a given set of contingencies.• Ackroyd's truestproseoccurs when he applies himself to the imitation of ancient and recentwriters - a repertoire of others.• Kate shouldn't have any problem finding a job with her repertoire of skills.• Some writing is of undoubtedly high quality and may well find a place in the permanentrepertoire of a wider public.• His interests were playing and teaching the great works of the standardrepertoire.• Some of them modifymental as well as bodilyfunctions and have effectsbeyond the repertoire of conventionallaboratoryexperiments in pharmacology.• Books like these contain much music which is transitory but include insufficient hymnody from the traditionalrepertoire.wide repertoire• The staphylococcus family boasts a wide repertoire of plasmids, too.Originrepertoire(1800-1900)Frenchrépertoire, from Late Latinrepertorium; → REPERTORY