Synonym: dry run. Similar words: rehearse, forehead, lose heart, wholeheartedly, move heaven and earth, for sale, dorsal, comprehend. Meaning: [rɪ'hɜrsl /-'hɜːsl] n. 1. a practice session in preparation for a public performance (as of a play or speech or concert) 2. (psychology) a form of practice; repetition of information (silently or aloud) in order to keep it in short-term memory.
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91. She took over after a week's rehearsal, during which Cuka's understudy, Gloria Connell, played opposite Crawford.
92. We reserved our position on the choice of interpreter for the eventual rehearsal period, hoping to bring Rosenshveig.
93. And these days one has so little rehearsal time to get any kind of perfection.
94. Sometimes he would keep them in rehearsal until the backstage call that alerted performers that there were only fifteen minutes to curtain.
95. The play went into rehearsal in mid-November for an opening on 171 Broadway on December 18 at the Booth Theater.
96. She drooped miserably into the farmhouse, dropping her bag of rehearsal clothes on to the floor.
97. I vividly recall attending a rehearsal in Salzburg at Whitsuntide 1977.
98. Is the performance to be videoed without an audience at a final rehearsal?
99. But these classical kids just stood around in rehearsal waiting to be shown what to do.
100. Or the actor who stumbles over his words for the second time at a rehearsal.
101. A specialist module which enables the student to extend his/her musical skills in voice and become self sufficient in rehearsal and performance.
102. The Business Rehearsal programme, which will combine training with actual business practice, runs from next month until September.
103. He had noticed that I was having difficulty reading my scripts during rehearsal.
104. Though this was only a preliminary, hypothetical run-through, she felt as nervous as a bride at a wedding rehearsal.
105. Then came what was almost a dress rehearsal of the Democratic Convention.
106. She fluffed it in rehearsal, but pulled it off for the cameras.
107. On the evening of the first full rehearsal she is again pressured into assuming a role.
108. There are rehearsal tracks that show how band wizard Brian Wilson whipped studio musicians into shape.
109. Is the press going to be invited in to take photographs at the dress rehearsal?
110. And indeed it was very difficult to press on with the rehearsal.
111. Cancer has taught me that life isn't a dress rehearsal, this is it and you only get the one chance.
112. Claudia threw herself into the rehearsal for the show, trying to conquer her nerves by sheer will-power.
113. He had a great love of music and when the rehearsal rooms were rented out would join the musicians.
114. This was the last opportunity for a dress rehearsal in the New York Preview theatre.
115. I'd have to tell you that it is an insipid and belated rehearsal of modernist experimentation with self-reflexivity.
116. I remember at one rehearsal the Don Giovanni came on stage in a rather bizarre costume.
117. I remember thinking after our very first rehearsal that it would never work.
118. It was said to be Mrs Thatcher's favourite television programme - indeed,[sentencedict.com/rehearsal.html] she actually took part in a rehearsal.
119. At the dress rehearsal she was disconsolate.
120. Ballet Rehearsal on the Stage, by Edgar Degas.
More similar words: rehearse, forehead, lose heart, wholeheartedly, move heaven and earth, for sale, dorsal, comprehend, apprehend, reversal, prehensile, universal, apprehended, comprehensive, apprehensive, comprehension, comprehensible, reprehensible, in tears, incomprehensible, in the heat of, make headway, hear, heard, heart, at heart, hear of, by heart, hear from, dishearten.