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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121. This was staged in the evening under floodlights on a football pitch.
122. When the total procedure was done under local anaesthesia, staged dilatation of the track over five to seven days was undertaken.
123. It has a great dance floor and discos and live bands are staged here regularly.
124. All that was left was a media exercise staged by Peter Mandelson, the party's director of communications.
125. We blocked off the main streets of the city centre and staged a sit-in at the Parque Libertad.
126. Berwick crashed at home to Newcastle last Saturday, but staged a quick recovery with a last-heat win at Glasow.
127. Last week their friends and relatives staged a demonstration alleging that police covered up evidence that would have supported that claim.
128. Its base is a beautifully restored former school, where Harry once staged his show.
129. Racing's only Sunday meeting of the year is to be staged at Lingfield Park on 1 August.
130. The ancients staged mock battles to parallel the tempests in nature and reduce their fear of gods who warred across the sky.
131. It has been on the provisional calendar before, but never staged a race.
132. Its heroes are household names and millions of pounds are at stake when it is staged.
133. Alongside him, Chris Bryan also staged a marvellous late recovery[sentencedict.com], coming back from 14-11 down to win 21-16.
134. She has been appointed this season after the Wordsworth Trust staged a six-day exhibition in Osaka last year.
135. After the wedding, the couple staged a huge reception for over 250 guests.
136. Clinton has already staged dry-runs in 20 media markets, airing three 30-second television commercials last June at a cost of.
137. As we noted above, the riders staged an organised protest against the police searches of team hotels and vehicles.
138. The trade union confederations staged a series of four-hour regional general strikes on Sept. 22-29 in protest at the budget.
139. By 1995 all the Big Three had staged a comeback in sales and profits.
140. Each year the Lake Eldora team staged a dual slalom between parents and racers.
141. This superbly staged meeting between the two heads of state did little to further the peace process in the Middle East.
142. It would be the game's answer to the Super Bowl and would be staged in venues like Tokyo.
143. For the scenes of wholesale death and destruction were staged during filming of the big new film about the Guildford Four.
144. Unemployed workers staged strikes, and hungry peasants in many areas seized estates and took over village councils.
145. Many, of course, are carefully staged, clearly presented, and very provocative.
146. The elaborately staged conferences have acquired a reputation for issuing high-sounding communiques urging remedial economic or monetary action.
147. The B-17s staged through Oakland on their way to Hawaii, and had dummy turret shells installed upon their arrival.
148. A considerable number of events are staged to attract television cameras.
149. The airline even staged a memorial near the watery crater in the Everglades.
150. The climbing was staged on a 15 metre high Enterprise wall, which overhung by up to four metres.
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.