English to Urdu Dictionary orchestrate

orchestrate

تائید
definition
verb
Among its new product features is Arrange, a function enabling the use of artificial intelligence to arrange and orchestrate music automatically.
arrange or score (music) for orchestral performance.
the developers were able to orchestrate a favorable media campaign
arrange or direct the elements of (a situation) to produce a desired effect, especially surreptitiously.
example
And yet even here Gould does not merely 'orchestrate' hymns.
Phoenix needs its maestro to 'orchestrate' its attack, especially with Cassell on the other side.
Nick's maid, Betty Pearce, was the one who had helped him 'orchestrate' his plans in the first place, and she was now to be Nora's personal attendant.
And, if Webern could orchestrate Bach, then why not let Poppen 'orchestrate' Webern?
There are a number of firms in Washington whose business it is to 'orchestrate' phony letter writing campaigns on behalf of pricey clients.
RUA are Liz Madden and Gloria Mulhall who compose, arrange, 'orchestrate' , produce and perform all their own music.
Among its new product features is Arrange, a function enabling the use of artificial intelligence to arrange and 'orchestrate' music automatically.
And they have a slightly alternative soundtrack to which they 'orchestrate' their moves.
Remember that the Divine has a keen sense of rhythm in helping to 'orchestrate' your life.
Now the question is whether Scheid can 'orchestrate' a winning score for Janus.
the developers were able to 'orchestrate' a favorable media campaign
At least, listening to his account, a composer would probably know how to go about 'orchestrating' the work.
The album was recorded live in NYC and London with small packs of musicians, including a string quartet to suggest the ‘dark, beautiful 'orchestrations' from the last century.’
Barber's skill in assembling and 'orchestrating' this 17-minute work is beyond question.
It wasn't a reaction against the previous album and those big, lush 'orchestrations' - I simply wanted to do something different.
Again, Cleveland-based 'orchestrator' Willie ‘Face’ Smith adds just the right touch of Dameronia to three tracks.
Two years later, ten weeks before his death, Mozart told his wife he was 'orchestrating' the rondo finale for his friend Anton
It is a way of gauging the sophistication with which Newman evoked specific times and places when he 'orchestrated' and arranged the finished tracks.
I don't mean the big-name celebrities, the deluded 'orchestrators' behind it all.
Both leaders played a major part in 'orchestrating' the EU's pledge at the Lisbon summit in March to copy US-style labour market flexibility.
These famous 'orchestrations' of Shostakovich's string quartets are of equal standing with the originals.
George's desires are subsequently 'orchestrated' with terrifying precision.
Busby was originally accused of 'orchestrating' a hoax letter-bomb campaign against English people living in Scotland in the mid-1990s.
To boost revenue, Pyott is 'orchestrating' a major shift in the company's product mix.
Rozema skillfully 'orchestrates' all of these elements together, and the result is a richly textured, entertaining and impressive debut.
Edmunds has 'orchestrated' several campaigns for Mr Baildon but this one has a new flavour.
Marian Maloney Higgins, head of the hairdressing college is 'orchestrating' the hair style element of the show.
There is no doubt that the singing and the rest of the score are beautifully performed and 'orchestrated' .
All the families believe the men in the dock are, if guilty, merely the agents of murder, not the 'orchestrators' .
But I have to say, that it's thanks to director James Foley's 'orchestration' that the film is worth seeing.
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