For his part, Davis has consistently expanded his offensive repertoire, reaching new heights alongside LeBron.
Anthony Davis Was Key For The Lakers’ Title Run. He’s Also The Key To Their Future.|James L. Jackson|October 14, 2020|FiveThirtyEight
It is not a projection from the symbolic repertoire of our cultural history, nor an arbitrary thought, but the inside, the existential side of the natural world’s biological functioning.
What the Meadow Teaches Us - Issue 90: Something Green|Andreas Weber|September 16, 2020|Nautilus
Human beings, more than any other living things, are characterized by an almost unlimited repertoire, a behavioral range that exceeds that of any other living creature.
Just Because It’s Natural Doesn’t Mean It’s Good - Issue 89: The Dark Side|David P. Barash|August 19, 2020|Nautilus
Their repertoire apparently knows no limits, nor does their energy onstage.
The Stacks: The Neville Brothers Stake Their Claim as Bards of the Bayou|John Ed Bradley|April 27, 2014|DAILY BEAST
They also played “Freebird,” a song not typically included in their repertoire.
BMI Reminds Ohio Bar: Cover Songs Don’t Come for Free|Caitlin Dickson|March 27, 2014|DAILY BEAST
Occasionally, her repertoire includes songs from “West Side Story.”
Rita Moreno, SAG Life Achievement Award Winner, Talks Brando, Elvis And West Side Story|Sandra McElwaine|January 15, 2014|DAILY BEAST
The test is not merely skill in the telling but the size of the teller's repertoire.
Robert Pinsky: The Comedy of Seamus Heaney|Robert Pinsky|October 1, 2013|DAILY BEAST
Hurley and Mazzei are now focused on expanding the collection, and plan to introduce women's bags to their repertoire.
YouTube Founder Quits for Fashion|Isabel Wilkinson|November 10, 2010|DAILY BEAST
Though it might have been that even the fat girl's repartee was more a matter of repertoire.
Ruth Fielding in the Great Northwest|Alice B. Emerson
To form such a repertoire, you may have to go a little out of the beaten track of what is best known at the time.
Advice to Singers|Frederick James Crowest
Tescheron proceeded to give me the repertoire of the dancing school.
Cupid's Middleman|Edward B. Lent
Then, perhaps, Mrs. Booch would produce a favourite piece from her repertoire.
Tono Bungay|H. G. Wells
In all the range of Maria's repertoire he was never able to detect more than a single tune.
The Boy Grew Older|Heywood Broun
British Dictionary definitions for repertoire
repertoire
/ (ˈrɛpəˌtwɑː) /
noun
all the plays, songs, operas, or other works collectively that a company, actor, singer, dancer, etc, has prepared and is competent to perform
the entire stock of things available in a field or of a kindthe comedian's repertoire of jokes was becoming stale
in repertoiredenoting the performance of two or more plays, ballets, etc, by the same company in the same venue on different evenings over a period of time``Nutcracker'' returns to Covent Garden over Christmas in repertoire with ``Giselle''
Word Origin for repertoire
C19: from French, from Late Latin repertōrium inventory; see repertory