From Longman Dictionary of Contemporary Englishinstrumentationin‧stru‧men‧ta‧tion /ˌɪnstrəmenˈteɪʃən/ noun [uncountable] 1 APMthe way in which a piece of music is arranged to be played by several different instruments2 Tthe set of instruments used to help in controlling a machine aircraft instrumentation
Examples from the Corpus
instrumentation• His final position before he left Harwell last year was director of process technology and instrumentation.• Davis began incorporating funk, rock and electric instrumentation with a vengeance.• The company produces electronic instrumentation systems.• The change in instrumentation thus touched off an explosion of information.• Besides, three-quarters of forensic scientific work doesn't require all this sophisticated instrumentation.• Looks aren't everything, of course, and that homely exterior houses some hi-tech instrumentation.• Another kind of KLEZmer group had the instrumentation of a small military or marching band.• The rest of the instrumentation comprises trumpet, drums and percussion.• B.. Regardless of what instrumentation you had, you still played these different kinds of songs.