stagecoach |
a large four-wheeled vehicle drawn by a team of horses and used in the past for long-distance transportation of passengers and cargo. |
stagecraft |
the art of, or skill in, writing or staging plays or using theatrical devices or techniques. |
stage direction |
an instruction written into, or added to, the script of a play, directing actors' movements, scenery arrangement, and the like. [2 definitions] |
stage door |
a back door of a theater, used by performers, the production crew, and the like. |
stage fright |
the nervousness and anxiety some people feel when speaking or performing before an audience. |
stagehand |
a person who moves furniture, props, scenery, and the like in a theatrical production. |
stage-manage |
to serve as stage manager for (a theatrical production). [3 definitions] |
stage manager |
an assistant to the director of a theatrical production, who is responsible for the technical direction and is in charge backstage during the performance. |
stage-struck |
having an intense and sometimes naive desire to be involved in theater, esp. as an actor. |
stage whisper |
an actor's loud whisper that is intended to be heard by the audience but not by the other actors. [2 definitions] |
stagflation |
an economic condition marked by a high rate of inflation together with a decline in business activity and an increase in unemployment. |
stagger |
to walk or stand unsteadily or with a need for support. [8 definitions] |
staggering |
astounding, shocking, or highly disturbing. [2 definitions] |
staghorn fern |
any of several ferns that have large divided fronds resembling antlers and that grow nonparasitically on trees, stumps, and the like. |
staging |
the act or process of preparing or putting on a theatrical production. [2 definitions] |
staging area |
a place where troops and military supplies are assembled before departing to another location. |
stagnant |
standing still; motionless. [3 definitions] |
stagnate |
to be or become motionless, fouled, or lacking in energy, originality, or development; be or become stagnant. |
stagy |
having qualities associated with a theatrical play; affected; unnatural. |
staid |
formal, solemn, and reserved in character. |
stain |
a spot or discoloration caused by a foreign substance; tarnish. [9 definitions] |