1. programme - Noun
2. programme - Verb
That which is written or printed as a public notice or advertisement; a scheme; a prospectus; especially, a brief outline or explanation of the order to be pursued, or the subjects embraced, in any public exercise, performance, or entertainment; a preliminary sketch.
Source: Webster's dictionaryThe news of the discovery spread fast all over the country, and inquisitive enquiries mingled with congratulations from this moment became the daily programme. Howard Carter
MGM never really gave me a break. They loaned me out for leading roles, but cast me in programme pictures. Laraine Day
It would be wrong to assume that one must stay with a research programme until it has exhausted all its heuristic power, that one must not introduce a rival programme before everybody agrees that the point of degeneration has probably been reached. Imre Lakatos
We will have to embark on a change so radical, a revolution so quiet and yet so total, that it will go far beyond the programme for a parliament. Edward Heath
The positive heuristic of the programme saves the scientist from becoming confused by the ocean of anomalies. Imre Lakatos
The 1973 Labour Conference will have before it the most radical programme the Party has prepared since 1945. Tony Benn