13 adverbs to describe how to staging

Then we'll have the grand operas, by all the most famous singers, elaborately staged; and we'll be able to see and hear them for ten cents, instead of ten dollars.

Strafford (1837), A Blot in the 'Scutcheon (1843), and Colombe's Birthday (1844) have been staged successfully, but they cannot be called great acting plays.

Not merely the stage but the whole interior of the theatre round about had been gilded, and all properties brought in had been adorned with gold, so that people came to refer to the very day as "golden."

Already it was receding, swifter and swifter, in the last stage of its headlong journey downward into the sun.

Accompanied by the weird music of Gyrowetz and exquisitely staged, this is the most popular of Grillparzer's plays in Vienna.

Every man's mind is gradually built up from infancy to maturity; the process is always going on before our eyes, yet the stages of itespecially the earliest stages, the most pregnant with instructionare never studied and put on record by observers trained in inductive logic, knowing beforehand what they ought to look for as the sine quâ non for proving or disproving any proposed theory.

They were vegetables tooall neatly staged in a little kiosk near the station.

Then a bell struck, a vibration ran through the boat, the stage outside lined with faces suddenly swayed and then fell into space.

But roughly the first stage, of a child's developing life ends when he can walk, eat more or less ordinary food, and is independent of his mother.

In 1872 I wrote out the story of our attempt for Mr. Howells, in the Atlantic Monthly, a film which may appropriately be staged among my pictures.

AFTER THE NURSERY STAGE Undoubtedly the aim of the transition class is partly to continue by means of games and dramatic play the kind of knowledge gained in the Nursery School; but it has also the task of beginning to organise such knowledge, as the grouping into tens and hundreds.

The play was beautifully staged; the garden scene alone probably cost as much as the whole of "Hamlet."

She prefers to jog along in the old rut, contentedly turning out chromolithographic sunrises such as they give away at the tea stores, contentedly staging the most violent and improbable melodramas; andsturdy old Philistine that she isshe even now permits her children to fall in love in the most primitive fashion.

13 adverbs to describe how to  staging  - Adverbs for  staging