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1 ♦ scene
♦ scene /si:n/n.1 scena ( anche teatr.); luogo; teatro (fig.): Othello, Act I, scene II, Otello, atto I, scena II; the balcony scene in «Romeo and Juliet», la scena del balcone in «Giulietta e Romeo»; the final scene, l'ultima scena; distressing scenes, scene strazianti; The scene is laid in Rome, la scena è posta a Roma; on (o at) the scene of the disaster, sul luogo del disastro; Waterloo was the scene of a famous battle, Waterloo fu teatro d'una famosa battaglia; the scene of the crime, la scena del delitto; to film (o to shoot) a scene, girare una scena3 scenata; scena: Now don't make a scene, via, non fare una scenata!; ugly scene, scena molto spiacevole4 [u] (fam.) ambiente; mondo: the drug scene, l'ambiente (o il mondo) della droga; I need a change of scene, ho bisogno di cambiare ambiente● scene bay = scene dock ► sotto □ (teatr.) scene-cloth, sipario; tela □ (teatr., cinem.) scene designer, scenografo □ (teatr.) scene dock, magazzino degli scenari □ (GB) scene-of-crime officer, primo poliziotto sul luogo del reato; poliziotto che svolge le prime indagini sul luogo del reato □ scene-painter, pittore di scene; scenografo □ scene-painting, scenografia □ (teatr.) scene-shifter, macchinista □ (teatr.) scene-shifting, cambiamento di scena □ (teatr.) scenes painted by X.Y., scenografia di X.Y. □ (fam. USA) a bad scene, un'esperienza (o un episodio) spiacevole □ ( spesso fig.) behind the scenes, dietro le scene; dietro le quinte □ ( spesso fig.) to come on the scene, entrare in scena; comparire □ to keep behind the scenes, stare dietro le quinte; (fig.) tenersi in disparte □ (fam. USA) to make the scene, fare la propria comparsa; essere presente, esserci □ ( di cronista, inviato, ecc.) on the scene, sul luogo ( di un avvenimento) □ (fig.) to quit the scene, uscire di scena □ to set the scene, (teatr.) montare la scena; (fig.) ricostruire (o descrivere) un ambiente; ( anche) creare le premesse (per qc.) □ (fig.) to steal the scene from sb., rubare la scena a q. -
2 steal
I [stiːl] II 1. [stiːl]2.to steal a glance at sth. — guardare furtivamente qcs.
1) (thieve) rubare, commettere un furtoto steal from sb. — rubare a qcn.
2) (creep)to steal up on sb. — avvicinarsi furtivamente a qcn
•••to steal a march on sb. — battere qcn. sul tempo
to steal the show — teatr. rubare la scena; fig. monopolizzare l'attenzione
* * *[sti:l]past tense - stole; verb1) (to take (another person's property), especially secretly, without permission or legal right: Thieves broke into the house and stole money and jewellery; He was expelled from the school because he had been stealing (money).) rubare2) (to obtain or take (eg a look, a nap etc) quickly or secretly: He stole a glance at her.) (ottenere furtivamente)3) (to move quietly: He stole quietly into the room.) (muoversi furtivamente)* * *steal /sti:l/n. (fam.)1 furto♦ (to) steal /sti:l/A v. t.1 rubare ( anche fig.); portare via; sottrarre; trafugare: My bag has been stolen, mi hanno rubato la borsa; to steal a secret formula, rubare una formula segreta2 (fig.) rubare; accattivarsi; ottenere (o procurarsi) con arti (o con l'astuzia): to steal a kiss, rubare un bacio; to steal sb. 's heart, accattivarsi l'affetto (o la simpatia) di q.B v. i.1 rubare; fare il ladro2 muoversi furtivamente; andare alla chetichella● ( baseball) to steal a base, rubare una base □ (fig.) to steal a march on sb., battere q. sul tempo □ to steal oneself out of st., perdere qc. per aver rubato □ (fam.) to steal the scene (o the show), attirare l'attenzione di tutti su di sé; monopolizzare l'attenzione; far il mattatore □ (fam.) to steal sb. 's thunder, rubare un'idea (o un'invenzione, una notizia) a q.; battere sul tempo q. □ ( Bibbia) Thou shalt not steal, non rubare! □ Time steals on, il tempo passa senza che ce ne accorgiamo.* * *I [stiːl] II 1. [stiːl]2.to steal a glance at sth. — guardare furtivamente qcs.
1) (thieve) rubare, commettere un furtoto steal from sb. — rubare a qcn.
2) (creep)to steal up on sb. — avvicinarsi furtivamente a qcn
•••to steal a march on sb. — battere qcn. sul tempo
to steal the show — teatr. rubare la scena; fig. monopolizzare l'attenzione
См. также в других словарях:
steal the show — {v. phr.} To act or do so well in a performance that you get most of the attention and the other performers are unnoticed. * /Mary was in only one scene of the play, but she stole the show from the stars./ … Dictionary of American idioms
steal the show — {v. phr.} To act or do so well in a performance that you get most of the attention and the other performers are unnoticed. * /Mary was in only one scene of the play, but she stole the show from the stars./ … Dictionary of American idioms
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steal\ the\ show — v. phr. To act or do so well in a performance that you get most of the attention and the other performers are unnoticed. Mary was in only one scene of the play, but she stole the show from the stars … Словарь американских идиом
scene — W2S2 [si:n] n ▬▬▬▬▬▬▬ 1¦(play/film)¦ 2¦(activities)¦ 3¦(accident/crime)¦ 4¦(view/picture)¦ 5¦(event/situation)¦ 6¦(argument)¦ 7 not be your scene 8 behind the scenes 9 set the scene 10 be/come on the scene … Dictionary of contemporary English
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