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orchestrate
[ awr-kuh-streyt ]
verb (used with or without object)
- to compose or arrange (music) for performance by an orchestra.
- to arrange or manipulate, especially by means of clever or thorough planning or maneuvering:
to orchestrate a profitable trade agreement.
orchestrate
/ ˈɔːɪˌٰɪ /
verb
- to score or arrange (a piece of music) for orchestra
- to arrange, organize, or build up for special or maximum effect
Derived Forms
- ˈǰˌٰٴǰ, noun
- ˌǰˈٰپDz, noun
Other yvlog Forms
- ǰ··ٰ·پDz [awr-k, uh, -, strey, -sh, uh, n] noun
- ǰ··ٰ·ٴǰ ǰ··ٰ· noun
- ··ǰ··ٰٱ verb overorchestrated overorchestrating
- ·ǰ··ٰٱ verb reorchestrated reorchestrating
- ܲ·ǰ··ٰ· adjective
yvlog History and Origins
Origin of orchestrate1
Example Sentences
His organisation wants the government to impose drastic mandatory reductions in rent on owners and is threatening to orchestrate a nationwide strike by tenants that would see participants refuse to pay their rent.
Other unreleased albums include the country-leaning Somewhere North of Nashville, cut in May 1995; and Twilight Hours, an orchestrated pop album that was written and recorded in the same period as 2018's Western Stars.
He was recorded in an undercover video posted on social media last week saying State Farm General “kind of” orchestrated its rate hikes.
Early contours of the Disney-Fox transaction — orchestrated by Disney Chief Executive Bob Iger and Murdoch — had envisioned the Century City compound as one of the assets included in the sale to Disney.
Goldberg initially believed that the message was a cleverly orchestrated hoax, a ploy put forth by press-hostile actors to embarrass journalists by getting them to report false information.
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