Similar words: advantaged, voltage drop, disadvantaged, stage, wastage, a stage, hostage, onstage. Meaning: [steɪdʒ] adj. 1. deliberately arranged for effect 2. written for or performed on the stage.
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61. The filmed dogfights are beautifully staged and feature numerous shots of the olive drab and grey P-40s against the blue Hawaiian sky.
62. Afterwards a rally is being staged at the Assembly Rooms against Government policy on public sector pay.
63. The firm staged the one-day boycott yesterday to put pressure on Liverpool City Council to pay up.
64. By agreeing to the staged confrontation, Barnett would save face while permitting Meredith to register.
65. Read in studio A school drama group tonight launches one of the most ambitious amateur productions ever staged.
66. The rally was the largest event ever staged by the San Francisco Organizing Project, which comprises 40 congregations citywide.
67. Students staged a sit-in to protest the firing of a popular professor.
68. A quiz night to be staged at the Mitchell's Club, Tunstall.
69. Louis, where the water polo competition was staged in an artificial pond.
70. The accused and a couple of friends staged a false robbery to get the money from the victim.
71. At least 20 of the rebel junior officers who staged the uprising surrendered by late afternoon.
72. Yet he staged an amazing comeback to pound out a points win.
72. Sentencedict.com try its best to gather and create good sentences.
73. He made his acting debut at the age of eight in a Bengali play staged at the Commonwealth Institute.
74. People living in Marl Drive staged a demonstration after waiting more than 18 hours for council workers to come to their assistance.
75. This does not mean that only wellknown or straight forward subjects and themes are to be staged. far from it.
76. It is being staged in the cross-community college's base at Adelaide Park, Belfast.
77. It was then that the newly-created Republican Party staged a convention that changed the course of the nation.
78. In collaboration with Rosy Martin she staged possible family pictures in a dramatic performance of concealed relationships and submerged emotion.
79. But my favorite has to be the Animal Liberation Front dorks who staged a daring raid on a mink farm.
80. Time allowed 00:15 Read in studio Police have staged an early morning raid in a bid to crack a stolen car racket.
81. And next Wednesday sees probably the biggest and most cosmopolitan trade wine show ever staged in the province.
82. Yes, all in all, a dreadful little show was being staged for me[sentencedict.com], up here on the twenty-first floor.
83. A seven-hour festival of youth rugby will be staged at Bristol's Memorial Ground next Sunday.
84. Students have staged several walkouts in protest of tuition increases.
85. The Solidarity trade union staged a nationwide day of protests against government economic austerity policies on May 22.
86. It has staged a remarkable recovery from the apparently moribund state of the late fifties and early sixties.
87. The protesters have also staged go-slows and traffic disruptions on motorways, and caused severe disruption in Edinburgh and Liverpool.
88. The plays were staged in sets of six, with no applause between parts of a set.
89. Protests continued in June in Belgrade as students staged anti-Milosevic marches.
90. The Shiites thought they were doing what President Bush wanted when they staged their uprising in March 1991.
More similar words: advantaged, voltage drop, disadvantaged, stage, wastage, a stage, hostage, onstage, offstage, upstage, postage, oral stage, backstage, stage left, stagecoach, at this stage, final stage, center stage, stage fright, tagged, aged, outage, dotage, engaged, tragedy, enraged, ravaged, bandaged, damaged, managed.