scene

  • 31scene — n. division of a play 1) to play; rehearse a scene 2) to steal ( dominate ) a scene display of anger, feelings 3) to make a scene 4) an awkward, painful scene location 5) at, on a scene (she was at the scene of the crime) 6) on the national scene …

    Combinatory dictionary

  • 32Scene — NOTOC Scene may refer to: Music * Scene (youth subculture), related to emo and post hardcore music * Scene (album), a noise album by Merzbow * Scenes (album), a music album by Marty Friedman * Scenes (band), Irish Jazz/Rock/Experimental Band *… …

    Wikipedia

  • 33Scène —  Pour les articles homophones, voir Cène, Seine et Scene (chanson). La scène du théâtre de Bielsko Biała (Pologne) …

    Wikipédia en Français

  • 34scene — n. 1 a place in which events in real life, drama, or fiction occur; the locality of an event etc. (the scene was set in India; the scene of the disaster). 2 a an incident in real life, fiction, etc. (distressing scenes occurred). b a description… …

    Useful english dictionary

  • 35scene*/*/*/ — [siːn] noun [C] 1) a part of a play, book, film etc in which events happen in the same place or period of time a love scene[/ex] the opening scene of Macbeth[/ex] 2) a view that you can see in a picture or from the place where you are She stood… …

    Dictionary for writing and speaking English

  • 36scene — /sin / (say seen) noun 1. the place where any action occurs. 2. any view or picture. 3. an incident or situation in real life. 4. an exhibition or outbreak of excited or violent feeling before others. 5. a division of a play or of an act of a… …

  • 37scene — noun 1) the scene of the accident Syn: location, site, place, position, point, spot; locale, setting, whereabouts; technical locus 2) the scene is Montreal, in the late 1890s Syn: background, setting …

    Thesaurus of popular words

  • 38scene — in·ter·scene; ob·scene·ly; ob·scene·ness; scene; scene·des·mus; scene·ster; dam·a·scene; ob·scene; …

    English syllables

  • 39scene — [sin] 1. n. a place; a setting. (See also make the scene.) □ This scene is no good. Let’s split. □ I need a different scene. Life is too hectic here. 2. n. the drug use environment; the drug scene. □ The longer you spend in a scene like this, the …

    Dictionary of American slang and colloquial expressions

  • 40scene — noun Etymology: Middle French, stage, from Latin scena, scaena stage, scene, probably from Etruscan, from Greek skēnē shelter, tent, building forming the background for a dramatic performance, stage; perhaps akin to Greek skia shadow more at… …

    New Collegiate Dictionary