Orchestrate vs Liaison - What's the difference?
orchestrate | liaison |
To arrange or score music for performance by an orchestra.
To compose or arrange orchestral music for a dramatic performance.
To arrange or direct diverse elements to achieve a desired effect
Communication between two parties or groups.
Co-operation, working together.
A relayer of information between two forces in an army or during war.
A tryst, romantic meeting.
(figuratively) An illicit sexual relationship or affair.
(linguistics) The phonological fusion of two consecutive words and the manner in which this occurs, for example intrusion, consonant-vowel linking, etc. In the context of some languages, such as French, liaison can refer specifically to a normally silent final consonant, being pronounced when the next word begins with a vowel, and can often also include the intrusion of a "t" in certain fixed chunks of language such as the question form "pense-t-il ".
As a verb orchestrate
is to arrange or score music for performance by an orchestra.As a noun liaison is
.orchestrate
English
Verb
(orchestrat)- Sergio Leone orchestrated "The Good, the Bad and the Ugly".
