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View synonyms for staging

staging

[ stey-jing ]

noun

  1. the act, process, or manner of presenting a play on the stage.
  2. a temporary platform or structure of posts and boards for support, as in building; scaffolding.
  3. Rocketry. the in-flight separation of a rocket stage from the remaining stages of a multistage missile or launch vehicle.
  4. the business of running stagecoaches.
  5. the act of traveling by stages or by stagecoach.


staging

/ ˈsteɪdʒɪŋ /

noun

  1. any temporary structure used in the process of building, esp the horizontal platforms supported by scaffolding


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Word History and Origins

Origin of staging1

1275–1325; Middle English ( stage, -ing 1 )

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Word History and Origins

Origin of staging1

C14: from stage + -ing 1

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Example Sentences

Nazi t-shirts are also very popular in Thailand, which is one step away from staging a revival of Springtime For Hitler.

The group encompasses Byrne's art-rock solitariness and the dissociation effects in the spare—somewhat Godardian—staging.

At the time, Madonna was staging her first real comeback and she chose videos as her battleground.

He goes down to the secure motorcade staging area, looking for a solution.

How about staging large-scale NATO military maneuvers at the border and freezing the assets of the kleptocracy?

From the scenic point of view it interested me greatly, and I was also much impressed by the truly marvellous staging of the work.

The bridge was constructed in 1888 by the Phoenix Bridge Company, and was erected on staging.

Why, from the class that tried to be clever and bluff the people out of their power by staging this war.

Superficially the task of staging The Beggars Opera was one of supreme ease.

The little cracked bells of the tiny church have been tinkling and in front of the church is a staging for a tombola.

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staghoundstaging area