stage
stage 英 [steɪdʒ] 美 [stedʒ]
n. 阶段;舞台 vt. 举行;上演
进行时:staging 过去式:staged 过去分词:staged 第三人称单数:stages 名词复数:stages
- A stage is a certain phase, like the toddler stage, when kids learn to walk and talk. Another kind of stage is a platform for a performance, although according to Shakespeare, “All the world's a stage.”
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- n. 阶段;舞台
- vt. 举行;上演
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1. This technology is still in its early stages.
这项技术还处于其早期开发状态。
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2. The product is at the design stage.
产品处于设计阶段。
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3. We did the first stage of the trip by train.
旅行的第一段我们乘的是火车。
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4. The audience threw flowers onto the stage.
观众把鲜花抛向舞台。
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5. There were more than 50 people on stage in one scene.
有一场戏中舞台上的人有 50 多个。
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6. His parents didn't want him to go on the stage .
他父母不想让他当演员。
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7. She was forced to the centre of the political stage.
她被推到了政治舞台的中心。
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8. to stage a ceremony exhibition, to stage a an exhibition
举行仪式╱展览
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9. to stage a strike, to stage a protest
组织罢工╱抗议活动
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10. The dollar staged a recovery earlier today.
今天早些时候,美元出现回升。
- stage (n.) mid-13c., "story of a building;" early 14c., "raised platform used for public display" (also "the platform beneath the gallows"), from Old French estage "building, dwelling place; stage for performance; phase, stage, rest in a journey" (12c., Modern French étage "story of a house, stage, floor, loft"), from Vulgar Latin *staticum "a place for standing," from Latin statum, past participle of stare "to stand," from PIE root *sta- "to stand, make or be firm." Meaning "platform for presentation of a play" is attested from late 14c.; generalized for "profession of an actor" from 1580s.
- stage (v.) early 14c., "to erect, construct," from stage (n.). The meaning "put into a play" is from c. 1600; that of "put (a play) on the stage" first recorded 1879; general sense of "to mount" (a comeback, etc.) is attested from 1924. Related: Staged; staging.
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