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stage
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The Salt of the World?
- Stage - n. - A floor or story of a house.
- Stage - n. - An elevated platform on which an orator may speak, a play be performed, an exhibition be presented, or the like.
- Stage - n. - A floor elevated for the convenience of mechanical work, or the like; a scaffold; a staging.
- Stage - n. - A platform, often floating, serving as a kind of wharf.
- Stage - n. - The floor for scenic performances; hence, the theater; the playhouse; hence, also, the profession of representing dramatic compositions; the drama, as acted or exhibited.
- Stage - n. - A place where anything is publicly exhibited; the scene of any noted action or carrer; the spot where any remarkable affair occurs.
- Stage - n. - The platform of a microscope, upon which an object is placed to be viewed. See Illust. of Microscope.
- Stage - n. - A place of rest on a regularly traveled road; a stage house; a station; a place appointed for a relay of horses.
- Stage - n. - A degree of advancement in a journey; one of several portions into which a road or course is marked off; the distance between two places of rest on a road; as, a stage of ten miles.
- Stage - n. - A degree of advancement in any pursuit, or of progress toward an end or result.
- Stage - n. - A large vehicle running from station to station for the accomodation of the public; a stagecoach; an omnibus.
- Stage - n. - One of several marked phases or periods in the development and growth of many animals and plants; as, the larval stage; pupa stage; zoea stage.
- Stage - v. t. - To exhibit upon a stage, or as upon a stage; to display publicly.
- Stage-struck - a. - Fascinated by the stage; seized by a passionate desire to become an actor.
- Stagecoach - n. - A coach that runs regularly from one stage, station, or place to another, for the conveyance of passengers.
- Stagecoachman - n. - One who drives a stagecoach.
- Stagecoachmen - pl. - of Stagecoachman
- Stagehouse - n. - A house where a stage regularly stops for passengers or a relay of horses.
- Stagely - a. - Pertaining to a stage; becoming the theater; theatrical.
- Stageplay - n. - A dramatic or theatrical entertainment.
- Stageplayer - n. - An actor on the stage; one whose occupation is to represent characters on the stage; as, Garrick was a celebrated stageplayer.
- Stager - n. - A player.
- Stager - n. - One who has long acted on the stage of life; a practitioner; a person of experience, or of skill derived from long experience.
- Stager - n. - A horse used in drawing a stage.
- Stagery - n. - Exhibition on the stage.
- Traverse - a. - A formal denial of some matter of fact alleged by the opposite party in any stage of the pleadings. The technical words introducing a traverse are absque hoc, without this; that is, without this which follows.
- Critical - n. - Pertaining to, or indicating, a crisis, turning point, or specially important juncture; important as regards consequences; hence, of doubtful issue; attended with risk; dangerous; as, the critical stage of a fever; a critical situation.
- Coulisse - n. - One of the side scenes of the stage in a theater, or the space included between the side scenes.
- Post - n. - A station, or one of a series of stations, established for the refreshment and accommodation of travelers on some recognized route; as, a stage or railway post.
- Coenurus - n. - The larval stage of a tapeworm (Taenia coenurus) which forms bladderlike sacs in the brain of sheep, causing the fatal disease known as water brain, vertigo, staggers or gid.
- Ultimity - n. - The last stage or consequence; finality.
- Generation - n. - A single step or stage in the succession of natural descent; a rank or remove in genealogy. Hence: The body of those who are of the same genealogical rank or remove from an ancestor; the mass of beings living at one period; also, the average lifetime of man, or the ordinary period of time at which one rank follows another, or father is succeeded by child, usually assumed to be one third of a century; an age.
- Tadpole - n. - The young aquatic larva of any amphibian. In this stage it breathes by means of external or internal gills, is at first destitute of legs, and has a finlike tail. Called also polliwig, polliwog, porwiggle, or purwiggy.
- Cholerine - n. - The first stage of epidemic cholera.
- Sporosac - n. - An early or simple larval stage of trematode worms and some other invertebrates, which is capable or reproducing other germs by asexual generation; a nurse; a redia.
- Metanauplius - n. - A larval crustacean in a stage following the nauplius, and having about seven pairs of appendages.
- Run - a. - To go back and forth from place to place; to ply; as, the stage runs between the hotel and the station.
- Histrionical - a. - Of or relating to the stage or a stageplayer; befitting a theatre; theatrical; -- sometimes in a bad sense.
- Rostrum - n. - Hence, a stage for public speaking; the pulpit or platform occupied by an orator or public speaker.
- Campaign - n. - A connected series of military operations forming a distinct stage in a war; the time during which an army keeps the field.
- Orchestra - n. - The space in a theater between the stage and the audience; -- originally appropriated by the Greeks to the chorus and its evolutions, afterward by the Romans to persons of distinction, and by the moderns to a band of instrumental musicians.
- Stagehouse - n. - A house where a stage regularly stops for passengers or a relay of horses.
- Gastrula - n. - An embryonic form having its origin in the invagination or pushing in of the wall of the planula or blastula (the blastosphere) on one side, thus giving rise to a double-walled sac, with one opening or mouth (the blastopore) which leads into the cavity (the archenteron) lined by the inner wall (the hypoblast). See Illust. under Invagination. In a more general sense, an ideal stage in embryonic development. See Gastraea.
- Stage - n. - A degree of advancement in a journey; one of several portions into which a road or course is marked off; the distance between two places of rest on a road; as, a stage of ten miles.
- Secondary - a. - Dependent or consequent upon another disease; as, Bright's disease is often secondary to scarlet fever. (b) Occuring in the second stage of a disease; as, the secondary symptoms of syphilis.
- Stager - n. - One who has long acted on the stage of life; a practitioner; a person of experience, or of skill derived from long experience.
- Interlude - n. - A short entertainment exhibited on the stage between the acts of a play, or between the play and the afterpiece, to relieve the tedium of waiting.
- Feeder - n. - A branch railroad, stage line, or the like; a side line which increases the business of the main line.
- Explode - v. t. - To drive from the stage by noisy expressions of disapprobation; to hoot off; to drive away or reject noisily; as, to explode a play.
- Stage - n. - A place of rest on a regularly traveled road; a stage house; a station; a place appointed for a relay of horses.
strongscsv:description
- H1121 בֵּן - 1121 בֵּן - בֵּן - - bên - bane - from בָּנָה; a son (as a builder of the family name), in the widest sense (of literal and figurative relationship, including grandson, subject, nation, quality or condition, etc., (like father or brother), etc.); [phrase] afflicted, age, (Ahoh-) (Ammon-) (Hachmon-) (Lev-) ite, (anoint-) ed one, appointed to, ([phrase]) arrow, (Assyr-) (Babylon-) (Egypt-) (Grec-) ian, one born, bough, branch, breed, [phrase] (young) bullock, [phrase] (young) calf, [idiom] came up in, child, colt, [idiom] common, [idiom] corn, daughter, [idiom] of first, [phrase] firstborn, foal, [phrase] very fruitful, [phrase] postage, [idiom] in, [phrase] kid, [phrase] lamb, ([phrase]) man, meet, [phrase] mighty, [phrase] nephew, old, ([phrase]) people, [phrase] rebel, [phrase] robber, [idiom] servant born, [idiom] soldier, son, [phrase] spark, [phrase] steward, [phrase] stranger, [idiom] surely, them of, [phrase] tumultuous one, [phrase] valiant(-est), whelp, worthy, young (one), youth. - Noun Masculine - heb
- G5273 ὑποκριτής - 5273 ὑποκριτής - ὙΠΟΚΡΙΤΉΣ - - hypokritḗs - hoop-ok-ree-tace' - from ὑποκρίνομαι; an actor under an assumed character (stage-player), i.e. (figuratively) a dissembler ("hypocrite":--hypocrite. - Noun Masculine - greek
- H8594 תַּעֲרֻבָה - 8594 תַּעֲרֻבָה - תַּעֲרֻבָה - - taʻărubâh - tah-ar-oo-baw' - from עָרַב; suretyship, i.e. (concretely) a pledge; [phrase] hostage. - Noun Feminine - heb
- G2202 ζευκτηρία - 2202 ζευκτηρία - ΖΕΥΚΤΗΡΊΑ - - zeuktēría - dzook-tay-ree'-ah - feminine of a derivative (at the second stage) from the same as ζυγός; a fastening (tiller-rope):--band. - Noun Feminine - greek
phpBible_av:text
- 2 Chronicles 14 25:24 And he took all the gold and the silver, and all the vessels that were found in the house of God with Obededom, and the treasures of the king's house, the hostages also, and returned to Samaria.
זָהָב כֶּסֶף כְּלִי מָצָא בַּיִת אֱלֹהִים עֹבֵד אֱדוֹם אוֹצָר מֶלֶךְ בַּיִת תַּעֲרֻבָה בֵּן שׁוּב שֹׁמְרוֹן - 2 Kings 12 14:14 And he took all the gold and silver, and all the vessels that were found in the house of the LORD, and in the treasures of the king's house, and hostages, and returned to Samaria.
לָקַח זָהָב כֶּסֶף כְּלִי מָצָא בַּיִת יְהֹוָה אוֹצָר מֶלֶךְ בַּיִת תַּעֲרֻבָה בֵּן שׁוּב שֹׁמְרוֹן