partitur means A full score, conductor's score (with a separate line for every part). Lexicurio rates it Sui generis — a strength score of 91 out of 100.
Why “partitur” is a great word
PARTITUR — [Noun] A full orchestral score, typically used by a conductor, in which every individual instrumental or vocal part is notated on its own staff, arranged in a vertical hierarchy. From German Partitur, from Italian partitura (“partition, musical score”), from Latin partīre (“to divide, partition, share”) and the suffix -ura (denoting an action or result). Unlike a “part” (which is a solitary line for a single performer) or a “condensed score” (which compresses and simplifies for practicality), the partitur is the complete architectural blueprint, the total sonic vision laid bare. It is a dense forest of black staves, a vertical city of sound where the flute’s glittering spire rises above the cello’s murmuring foundation, and a map of a potential world containing every whisper and thunderclap the composer intended—the silent scripture from which ordered noise is born.
Etymology
From German Partitur, from Italian partitura (“partition, musical score”) , from Latin partito, from partīre (“divide, partition, share”) (Classical Latin partīrī) and -ura.
noun
- A full score, conductor's score (with a separate line for every part).“The partiturs for the popular shows, though, were apparently sent out one time too many.”