orchestration
Appearance
English
[edit]Etymology
[edit]From French orchestration.
Pronunciation
[edit]Noun
[edit]orchestration (countable and uncountable, plural orchestrations)
- (uncountable, music) The arrangement of music for performance by an orchestra.
- (countable, music) A composition that has been orchestrated.
- (uncountable, by extension) The control of diverse elements.
- 22 March 2012, Scott Tobias, AV Club The Hunger Games[1]
- It’s “The Most Dangerous Game” by way of The Running Man and Battle Royale, with touches of Survivor and the mass-scale orchestration of The Truman Show.
- 22 March 2012, Scott Tobias, AV Club The Hunger Games[1]
- (uncountable, by extension, computing) The automated arrangement, coordination, and management of computer systems, middleware, and services.
- 2021, Dhanushka Madushan, Cloud Native Applications with Ballerina […] , Packt Publishing Ltd, →ISBN, page 130:
- Microservices applications can be formed with thousand of containers. We need a proper container orchestration framework to handle all of these containers. Let's discuss Kubernetes, which is the most popular container orchestration system, in the next section.
Translations
[edit]arrangement of music for an orchestra
|
composition that has been orchestrated
|
control of diverse elements
|
Further reading
[edit]- orchestration on Wikipedia.Wikipedia
- orchestration (computing) on Wikipedia.Wikipedia
French
[edit]Etymology
[edit]Pronunciation
[edit]Noun
[edit]orchestration f (plural orchestrations)
See also
[edit]Further reading
[edit]- “orchestration”, in Trésor de la langue française informatisé [Digitized Treasury of the French Language], 2012.
Categories:
- English terms borrowed from French
- English terms derived from French
- English terms with audio pronunciation
- Rhymes:English/eɪʃən
- Rhymes:English/eɪʃən/4 syllables
- English lemmas
- English nouns
- English uncountable nouns
- English countable nouns
- en:Music
- en:Computing
- English terms with quotations
- French terms suffixed with -ation
- French 4-syllable words
- French terms with IPA pronunciation
- French terms with audio pronunciation
- French lemmas
- French nouns
- French countable nouns
- French feminine nouns