repertory: [16] A repertory is etymologically a list of things ‘found’. The word was adopted from late Latin repertōrium, a derivative of reperīre ‘find out’. This was formed from the base *per- ‘attempt’, which has also given English experience, expert, peril, pirate, etc. The sense ‘list of plays, pieces of music, etc performed’ was introduced from French in the 19th century, along with the French form repertoire. => experience, expert, peril, pirate
repertory (n.)
1550s, "an index, list, catalogue," from Late Latin repertorium "inventory, list," from Latin repertus, past participle of reperire "to find, get, invent," from re-, intensive prefix (see re-), + parire, archaic form of paerere "produce, bring forth," from PIE root *per- "attempt" (see parent (n.)). Meaning "list of performances" is first recorded 1845, from Anglicized use of repertoire; repertory theater is attested from 1896. Related: Repertorial.
例文
1. M an actor in repertory
輪演演目に参加する俳優
2.After leaving drama school I joined a repertory company.
演劇学校を出た後、私は演劇学校を残した輪演劇団に参加しました。
3.Her repertory was vast and to her it seemed that each song told some part of her life.
彼女が歌う曲はたくさんあり、彼女にとってはどの曲も彼女の生活の一部を語っているようだ。
4.He was in repertory in Dundee.
ダンディーの演目で劇団を輪演している。
5.Mary weighed down her repertory with these plays.