codirect
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English
[edit]Etymology
[edit]Verb
[edit]codirect (third-person singular simple present codirects, present participle codirecting, simple past and past participle codirected)
- (transitive) To direct (an artistic work) with another person.
- 1999 October 1, Lewis Lazare, “Dumped/Jumped/Bumped/Bottom Lines”, in Chicago Reader[1]:
- Jones insists he had no warning but does remember Bussert saying at some point, "I think you want to codirect this show."
- 2005 May 6, Jeffrey Felshman, “A Neo-Futurist Never Looks Back”, in Chicago Reader[2]:
- On the same visit to Oberlin he volunteered to codirect a school production of Tartuffe, in which he also played a bit part that turned out to be fateful.
Alternative forms
[edit]Related terms
[edit]Translations
[edit]to direct with another person
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