Thesaurus.com
Dictionary.com
Showing results for orchestration.
Definitions

orchestration

[awr-kuh-strey-shuhn] / ˌɔr kəˈstreɪ ʃən /


NOUN
score
Synonyms


Example Sentences

Examples are provided to illustrate real-world usage of words in context. Any opinions expressed do not reflect the views of Dictionary.com.

Wilson, who first staged “Messiah” at the Salzburg Festival in 2020 using Mozart’s seldom-heard orchestration, treats this as a spiritual fantasy.

From Los Angeles Times • May 11, 2026

We are drawn by the painting’s rich orchestration of warm and cool browns—from sludgy tan to super-charged ocher verging on sienna—and its seductive textures.

From The Wall Street Journal • Apr. 17, 2026

“The question is no longer whether it can dominate the training boom; it is whether it can stay central as AI spending broadens into inference, orchestration, and more customized compute.”

From Barron's • Apr. 1, 2026

“While GPUs handle the heavy mathematical lifting for AI, modern high-core-count CPUs are becoming indispensable for orchestration, data-management, and real-time inference tasks that GPUs cannot perform efficiently,” Lee wrote.

From MarketWatch • Mar. 20, 2026

What is different, and new, about this movement is not its structure, orchestration or technical bravado, but its attitude.

From "The Story of Music" by Howard Goodall