As thorough bibliographical knowledge is the foundation for the work of the librarian, the central subject of instruction in the school should be the study of bibliographical repertories and of the record literature.
Bibliographical repertories contain the systematic records of printed documents and the study of these repertories is what is called bibliography in the narrow sense.
With all his books at hand, all his legal authorities, the precious "Commonplace Book" and all the repertories he had gathered in his library, Jefferson proceeded to draft a project of instructions for the future delegates.
The list included ten operas not in the repertories of the German companies, which had occupied the opera house between the two administrations of Mr. Abbey.
Jenny Van Zandt headed companies which exploited as varied and dignified repertories as those of the German companies at the Metropolitan Opera House, barring the Wagnerian list.
Among the indispensable instruments of Heuristic must thus be reckoned bibliographical repertories of historical literature, as well as repertories of catalogues of original documents.
The knowledge of repertories is useful to all; the preliminary search for documents is laborious to all; but not in the same degree.
A book on the repertories for the use of scholars and historians is, as a general rule, out of date the day after it has been completed.
In these vast repertories there will be found, along with a short presentment of the subject, complete bibliographical references, direct as well as indirect.
The earliest repertories and the earliest scientific "manuals" were composed by isolated individuals.
Repertories are executed, in our days, by collaborators in association (who are sometimes of different nationalities and write in different languages).
These writings are known as Repertories or Calendars, and they are also used to discover articles lost or stolen, and to effect cures of diseases.
So it came about that while some of the clergy denounced all minstrels as 'ministers of Satan', others made a truce with the more honest among them, and helped them to add to their repertories the lives of saints.
Evidently, to determine the relative popularity of the longer tales in verse we need not so much a catalogue of extant manuscripts, as a census, that cannot now be taken, of the repertories of the entertainers.
Repertories containing the Proceedings of the Court of Aldermen from 1495 to the present time.
The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "repertories" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word.