<span class="searchmatch">improvisatory</span> (comparative more <span class="searchmatch">improvisatory</span>, superlative most <span class="searchmatch">improvisatory</span>) Of, pertaining to, or in the nature of improvisation pertaining to improvisation...
төкпе • (tökpe) improvisational, <span class="searchmatch">improvisatory</span> төкпелік (tökpelık)...
singular improvisatorisk, definite singular and plural improvisatoriske) <span class="searchmatch">improvisatory</span> improvisasjon improvisere “improvisatorisk” in The Bokmål Dictionary...
IPA(key): [ˈɪmprovɪzat͡ʃɲiː] improvizační <span class="searchmatch">improvisatory</span>, improvisational improvizace improvizovat...
Syllabification: im‧pro‧vi‧sa‧to‧rio improvisatorio (feminine improvisatoria, masculine plural improvisatorios, feminine plural improvisatorias) <span class="searchmatch">improvisatory</span>...
theater where the script is not written in advance, but develops from collaborative, usually <span class="searchmatch">improvisatory</span>, work, often by the performers themselves....
Internationalism (see English <span class="searchmatch">improvisatory</span>). Adapted with the adjectival suffix + -inen. IPA(key): /ˈimproʋisɑtorinen/, [ˈim.pro̞ˌʋis̠ɑ̝ˌt̪o̞rine̞n]...
in Late Renaissance & Early Baroque Italy: A gradual shift from the <span class="searchmatch">improvisatory</span>, preludial ricercare to a more formally structured composition is apparent...
(comparative more improvisatorial, superlative most improvisatorial) <span class="searchmatch">improvisatory</span> 1853, Robert William Browne, A history of Roman classical literature...
The New York Times, “Dance in Review”, in New York Times[1]: This <span class="searchmatch">improvisatory</span> element engendered a vibrant, appealingly unstagey quality of performance...