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programme
/ ˈprəʊɡræm /
noun
- a written or printed list of the events, performers, etc, in a public performance
- a performance or series of performances, often presented at a scheduled time, esp on radio or television
- a specially arranged selection of things to be done
what's the programme for this afternoon?
- a plan, schedule, or procedure
- a syllabus or curriculum
verb
- to design or schedule (something) as a programme
noun
- computing a variant spelling of program
Word History and Origins
Origin of programme1
Example Sentences
Having finished the first semester of his management programme at Peking University, the 23-year-old was delighted still when his vacation was extended due to the spread of Covid-19 in China.
People should have meaningful opportunities to participate in response and recovery programmes.
A McKinsey study shows the stimulus programmes of India, South Africa, and Brazil have been much smaller, as a percentage of GDP, than developed countries such as Germany and France.
Affirmative action programmes, especially those which use race as part of university admissions, and which have been hanging by a thread in the past few years, are also likely to be targets for a new court majority.
The Railsbank team will conscientiously work on ensuring customers, programme managers and team members have a seamless transfer to their new home.
The four page boys listed in today's programme were Hugo Bertie, Viscount Aithrie, Charles Armstrong-Jones and Arthur Chatto.
“I never spoke to anyone regarding the book launching programme,” he told Dawn newspaper.
Each FEED product sold supports organizations such as the U.N. World Food Programme, UNICEF, and Feeding America.
But with democracy suspended, the IMF and World Bank encouraged Indira to pursue the programme with renewed vigour.
The Reagan White House kept Pakistan's programme hidden from Congress.
She is spending the summer near Deppe, and he hears her play the programme she is going to give in Berlin next winter, every day.
But there was nothing systematic about the programme, no appearance of prearrangement nor even premeditation.
This had been the programme which Mrs. Pontellier had religiously followed since her marriage, six years before.
Then came two pieces by the orchestra; next, my three solos in a row, and a symphony of Haydn closed the programme.
Rubinstein asked me to write them down at once, and added them to the programme-book with the composers consent.
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