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English-Thai Dictionary

scene

N การแสดง ความไม่พอใจ  การแสดง ความโกรธ  อาการ โกรธ  fuss commotion kan-sa-dang-kwam-mai-por-jai

 

scene

N ฉาก  ตอน  act episode part chak

 

scene

N ทิวทัศน์  ทัศนียภาพ  สิ่งแวดล้อม  landscape panorama view til-tad

 

scene

N สถานที่เกิดเหตุ  ที่เกิดเหตุ  จุด เกิดเหตุ  area site place spot sa-tan-ti-koed-hed

 

scene

N เหตุการณ์  สถานการณ์  background location hed-kan

 

scenery

N ฉาก บน เวที  backdrop chak-bon-we-te

 

scenery

N ทิวทัศน์  ทัศนียภาพ  landscape prospect til-tad

 

Webster's 1828 Dictionary

SCENE

n.[L. scena; Gr. Heb. The Greek word signifies a tent, hut or cottage. In L. it is an arbor or stage. The primary sense is to set or throw down. ] 1. A stage; the theater or place where dramatic pieces and other shows are exhibited. It does not appear that the ancients changed the scenes in different parts of the play. Indeed the original scene for acting was an open plat of ground, shaded or slightly covered.
2. The whole series of actions and events connected and exhibited; or the whole assemblage of objects displayed at one view. Thus we say, the execution of a malefactor is a melancholy scene. The crucifixion of our Saviour was the most solemn scene ever presented to the view of man.
We say also, a scene of sorrow or of rejoicing, a noble scene, a sylvan scene.
A charming scene of nature is display'd.
3. A part of a play; a division of an act. A play is divided into acts, and acts are divided into scenes.
4. So much of an act of a play as represents what passes between the same persons in the same place.
5. The place represented by the sate. The scene was laid in the king's palace.
6. The curtain or hanging of a theater adapted to the play.
7. The place where any thing is exhibited.
The world is a vast scene of strife.
8. Any remarkable exhibition.
The shepherds, while watching their flocks upon the plains of Bethehem, were suddenly interrupted by one of the most sublime and surprising scenes which have ever been exhibited on earth.

 

SCENERY

n.The appearance of a place, or of the various objects presented to view; or the various objects themselves as seen together. Thus we may say, the scenery of the landscape presented to the view from mount Holyoke, in Hampshire county, Massachusetts, is highly picturesque, and exceeded only by the scenery of Boston and its vicinity, as seen from the State house. Never need an American look beyond his own country for the sublime and beautiful of natural scenery.
2. The representation of the place in which an action is performed.
3. The disposition and consecution of the scenes of a play.
4. The paintings representing the scenery of a play.

 

Webster's 1913 Dictionary

SCENE

Scene, n. Etym: [L. scaena, scena, Gr.

 

1. The structure on which a spectacle or play is exhibited; the part of a theater in which the acting is done, with its adjuncts and decorations; the stage.

 

2. The decorations and fittings of a stage, representing the place in which the action is supposed to go on; one of the slides, or other devices, used to give an appearance of reality to the action of a play; as, to paint scenes; to shift the scenes; to go behind the scenes.

 

3. So much of a play as passes without change of locality or time, or important change of character; hence, a subdivision of an act; a separate portion of a play, subordinate to the act, but differently determined in different plays; as, an act of four scenes.My dismal scene I needs must act alone. Shak.

 

4. The place, time, circumstance, etc. , in which anything occurs, or in which the action of a story, play, or the like, is laid; surroundings amid which anything is set before the imagination; place of occurence, exhibition, or action. "In Troy, there lies the scene. "Shak. The world is a vast scene of strife. J. M. Mason.

 

5. An assemblage of objects presented to the view at once; a series of actions and events exhibited in their connection; a spectacle; a show; an exhibition; a view. Through what new scenes and changes must we pass! Addison.

 

6. A landscape, or part of a landscape; scenery. A sylvan scene with various greens was drawn, Shades on the sides, and in the midst a lawn. Dryden.

 

7. An exhibition of passionate or strong feeling before others; often, an artifical or affected action, or course of action, done for effect; a theatrical display. Probably no lover of scenes would have had very long to wait De Quincey. Behind the scenes, behind the scenery of a theater; out of the view of the audience, but in sight of the actors, machinery, etc. ; hence, conversant with the hidden motives and agencies of what appears to public view.

 

SCENE

SCENE Scene, v. t.

 

Defn: To exhibit as a scene; to make a scene of; to display. [Obs. ] Abp. Sancroft.

 

SCENEFUL

SCENEFUL Scene "ful, a.

 

Defn: Having much scenery. [R.]

 

SCENEMAN

Scene "man, n.; pl. Scenemen (.

 

Defn: The man who manages the movable scenes in a theater.

 

SCENERY

SCENERY Scen "er *y, n.

 

1. Assemblage of scenes; the scenes of a play; the disposition and arrangement of the scenes in which the action of a play, poem, etc. , is laid; representation of place of action or occurence.

 

2. Sum of scenes or views; general aspect, as regards variety and beauty or the reverse, in a landscape; combination of natural views, as woods, hills, etc. Never need an American look beyond his own country for the sublime and beautiful of natural scenery. W. Irving.

 

SCENESHIFTER

SCENESHIFTER Scene "shift `er, n.

 

Defn: One who moves the scenes in a theater; a sceneman.

 

New American Oxford Dictionary

scene

scene |sēn sin | noun 1 the place where an incident in real life or fiction occurs or occurred: the emergency team were among the first on the scene | relatives left flowers at the scene of the crash. a place, with the people, objects, and events in it, regarded as having a particular character or making a particular impression: a scene of carnage. a landscape: thick snow had turned the scene outside into a picture postcard. an incident of a specified nature: there had already been some scenes of violence. a place or representation of an incident: scenes of 1930s America. [ with modifier ] a specified area of activity or interest: the country music scene. [ usu. in sing. ] a public display of emotion or anger: she was loath to make a scene in the office. 2 a sequence of continuous action in a play, movie, opera, or book: a scene from Brando's first film. a subdivision of an act of a play in which the time is continuous and the setting fixed and which does not usually involve a change of characters: beginning at Act One, Scene One. [ usu. as modifier ] the pieces of scenery used in a play or opera: scene changes. PHRASES behind the scenes out of sight of the public at a theater or organization. secretly: diplomatic maneuvers going on behind the scenes. change of scene another way of saying change of scenery (see scenery ). come (or appear or arrive ) on the scene arrive; appear. hit (or make ) the scene informal way of saying come on the scene above. not one's scene informal not something one enjoys or is interested in: sorry, that witchcraft stuff is not my scene. set the scene describe a place or situation in which something is about to happen. create the conditions for a future event: the congressman's speech set the scene for a bitter debate. ORIGIN mid 16th cent. (denoting a subdivision of a play, or (a piece of ) stage scenery ): from Latin scena, from Greek skēnē tent, stage.

 

scene dock

scene dock noun a space in a theatre near the stage in which scenery is stored.

 

scene-of-crime

scene-of-crime (also scenes-of-crime ) adjective Brit. relating to or denoting a civilian branch of the police force concerned with the collection of forensic evidence.

 

scenery

scen er y |ˈsēn (ə )rē ˈsin (ə )ri | noun the natural features of a landscape considered in terms of their appearance, esp. when picturesque: spectacular views of mountain scenery. the painted background used to represent natural features or other surroundings on a theater stage or movie set. PHRASES change of scenery a move to different surroundings: we spent the weekend in Seattle just for a change of scenery. PHRASAL VERBS chew ( up ) the scenery (of an actor ) overact: he chews up the courtroom scenery as the unscrupulous attorney. ORIGIN mid 18th cent. (earlier as scenary ): from Italian scenario (see scenario ). The change in the ending was due to association with -ery .

 

scene-shifter

scene-shifter noun chiefly Brit. a person who moves the scenery on a stage between the scenes of a play. DERIVATIVES scene-shifting noun

 

scene-stealer

scene-steal er |sin ˈstilər | noun an actor who outshines the rest of the cast, esp. unexpectedly. a person or thing that takes more than their fair share of attention.

 

scenester

scene ster |ˈsēnstər ˈsinstər | noun informal a person associated with or immersed in a particular fashionable cultural scene.

 

Oxford Dictionary

scene

scene |siːn | noun 1 the place where an incident in real life or fiction occurs or occurred: the emergency team were among the first on the scene | relatives left floral tributes at the scene of the crash. a place or setting regarded as having a particular character or making a particular impression: a scene of carnage. a landscape: thick snow had turned the scene outside into a picture postcard. an incident of a specified nature: there had already been some scenes of violence. a representation of an incident, or the incident itself: scenes of 1930s America. [ with adj. or noun modifier ] a specified area of activity or interest: one of the biggest draws on the Irish music scene. (usu. the scene ) informal a social environment frequented predominantly by homosexuals: I don't go out into the scene now. [ usu. in sing. ] a public display of emotion or anger: she was loath to make a scene in the office. 2 a sequence of continuous action in a play, film, opera, or book: a scene from Tarantino's latest movie. a subdivision of an act of a play in which the time is continuous and the setting fixed and which does not usually involve a change of characters: beginning at Act One, Scene One. [ mass noun ] [ usu. as modifier ] the pieces of scenery used in a play or opera: scene changes. PHRASES behind the scenes out of sight of the public at a theatre or organization. secretly: diplomatic manoeuvres going on behind the scenes. change of scene a move to different surroundings. come (or appear or arrive ) on the scene arrive; appear: the family had gone by the time I came on the scene. hit (or US make ) the scene informal arrive; appear. not one's scene informal not something one enjoys or is interested in: as for that job you mention, not my scene. set the scene describe a place or situation in which something is about to happen. create the conditions for a future event: she jumped a flawless round and set the scene for a hair-raising jump-off. ORIGIN mid 16th cent. (denoting a subdivision of a play, or (a piece of ) stage scenery ): from Latin scena, from Greek skēnē tent, stage .

 

scene dock

scene dock noun a space in a theatre near the stage in which scenery is stored.

 

scene-of-crime

scene-of-crime (also scenes-of-crime ) adjective Brit. relating to or denoting a civilian branch of the police force concerned with the collection of forensic evidence.

 

scenery

scen ¦ery |ˈsiːn (ə )ri | noun [ mass noun ] 1 the natural features of a landscape considered in terms of their appearance, especially when picturesque: spectacular views of mountain scenery. 2 the painted background used to represent natural features or other surroundings on a theatre stage or film set. PHRASES change of scenery another way of saying change of scene (see scene ). chew the scenery informal, chiefly US (of an actor ) overact. ORIGIN mid 18th cent. (earlier as scenary ): from Italian scenario (see scenario ). The change in the ending was due to association with -ery .

 

scene-shifter

scene-shifter noun chiefly Brit. a person who moves the scenery on a stage between the scenes of a play. DERIVATIVES scene-shifting noun

 

scene-stealer

scene-stealer noun a person or thing taking more than their fair share of attention.

 

scenester

scenester |ˈsiːnstə | noun informal, chiefly N. Amer. a person associated with or immersed in a particular fashionable cultural scene.

 

American Oxford Thesaurus

scene

scene noun 1 the scene of the accident: location, site, place, position, point, spot; locale, setting, whereabouts; technical locus. 2 the scene is Montreal, in the late 1890s: background, setting, context, milieu, backdrop, mise en scène. 3 terrible scenes of violence: incident, event, episode, happening, moment. 4 an impressive mountain scene: view, vista, outlook, panorama, sight; landscape, scenery; picture, tableau, spectacle. 5 she created a scene outside the bank: fuss, exhibition of oneself, performance, tantrum, outburst, commotion, disturbance, upset, furor, brouhaha, row, contretemps; informal song and dance, to-do. 6 the political scene | sorry, fishing just isn't my scene: arena, stage, sphere, world, milieu, realm, domain; area of interest, field, field of interest, specialty, province, preserve; informal thing. 7 the last scene of the play: subdivision, division, section, segment. 8 a scene from a Laurel and Hardy movie: clip, section, segment, part, sequence. PHRASES behind the scenes adverb informal discussions continued behind the scenes: secretly, in secret, privately, in private, behind closed doors, surreptitiously, off the record; informal on the quiet, on the QT; formal sub rosa. behind-the-scenes adjective a behind-the-scenes romance: secret, private, clandestine, surreptitious; confidential.

 

scenery

scenery noun 1 the beautiful scenery of the Rockies: landscape, countryside, country, terrain, topography, setting, surroundings, environment; view, vista, panorama; cityscape, townscape, roofscape; riverscape, seascape, waterscape, snowscape. 2 we all helped with the scenery and costumes: stage set, set, mise en scène, backdrop, drop curtain; setting, background, decor.

 

Oxford Thesaurus

scene

scene noun 1 others were treated at the scene of the accident for cuts and bruises: location, site, place, position, point, spot; locale, whereabouts; arena, stage, set; technical locus. 2 tapestries and shields adorned the wall, setting the scene for the conference | the scene is London, in the late 1890s: background, setting, context, milieu, backdrop; French mise en scène. 3 there had been terrible scenes of violence in Europe: incident, event, episode, happening, moment. 4 an impressive mountain scene: view, vista, outlook, panorama, prospect, sight; landscape, scenery; picture, tableau, spectacle. 5 she made an embarrassing scene outside the bank: fuss, exhibition of oneself, performance, tantrum, outburst, commotion, disturbance, row, upset, contretemps, furore, brouhaha; informal song and dance, to-do; Brit. informal carry-on. 6 Michael never joined in —I don't think it was his scene | the Irish music scene: area of interest, field of interest, field, interest, speciality, territory, province, preserve; sphere, world, milieu, realm, domain; informal thing. 7 the last scene of the play: subdivision, division, section, segment. 8 a scene from a Laurel and Hardy film: section, segment, part, clip, sequence. PHRASES behind the scenes 1 informal discussions continued behind the scenes: secretly, in secret, privately, in private, behind closed doors, clandestinely, surreptitiously; confidentially, off the record; informal on the quiet, on the q.t.. ANTONYMS publicly. 2 behind-the-scenes diplomatic activity: secret, private, clandestine, surreptitious; confidential. ANTONYMS public.

 

scenery

scenery noun 1 the beautiful scenery of central and west Wales: landscape, countryside, country, terrain, topography, setting, surroundings, environment; view, vista, panorama, prospect, outlook; cityscape, townscape, roofscape, riverscape, seascape, waterscape, snowscape. 2 we had all helped with the scenery and costumes: stage set, set, flats, backdrop, drop curtain; setting, background, decor; Brit. backcloth; French coulisse, mise en scène.

 

Duden Dictionary

Scene

Scene Substantiv, feminin Jargon , die |siːn |die Scene; Genitiv: der Scene, Plural: die Scenes englisch scene < (mittel )französisch scène, Szene 1 Örtlichkeit in einer Stadt, wo Verkäufer und Käufer von Drogen 2b zusammentreffen und ihre Geschäfte abwickeln 2 Szene 4 die alternative Scene | er sollte als V-Mann in die autonome Scene eingeschleust werden

 

French Dictionary

scène

scène n. f. nom féminin 1 Partie du théâtre où évoluent les acteurs. : Une scène tournante. Entrer en scène. Sortir de scène. SYNONYME plateau . 2 Le théâtre. : Les arts de la scène. 3 Subdivision d ’un acte. : Acte II, scène iii. Note Typographique Le numéro de l ’acte se compose en chiffres romains grandes capitales; le numéro de la scène se compose en chiffres romains petites capitales. 4 Séquence d ’un film. : Cette scène est terrifiante. 5 Lieu se passe une action. : Les ambulanciers ont quitté la scène de l ’accident. 6 Dispute. : Ne fais pas de scène, je t ’en prie: calme-toi. LOCUTION Mise en scène. Réalisation d ’une œuvre au théâtre, au cinéma, à la télévision. Note Orthographique s c ène.

 

Sanseido Wisdom Dictionary

scene

scene /siːn / (! seenと同音 ) 〖原義は 「劇場の舞台 」〗(名 )scenery 名詞 s /-z /C 1 a. (演劇 オペラなどの )act (幕 )の中の小区分 〙Act Two, Scene 1 of Hamlet ハムレット 』の第2幕第1場 .b. (一連の行動が起きる )場面 , シーン ; 舞台 , 背景 the first [last ] scene 冒頭の場面 [ラストシーン ]▸ a love scene ラブシーン The scene of the drama was laid [set ] in Paris .そのドラマの舞台はパリであった .2 a. (印象的な )景色 , 光景 , 眺め (scenery )▸ a winter scene 冬景色 .b. (絵画に描かれた )風景 , 場所 .3 〖通例単数形で 〗(事故 犯罪などが起きた )現場 , 現地 arrive [appear, come ] at [on ] the scene of the crime 犯行現場に到着する [現れる, 来る ]He was one of the first people at the scene of the accident .彼は事故現場に最初にかけつけた人の1人だった .4 the ; 修飾語を伴って 〗(特定の )業界 , 分野 the American music scene アメリカの音楽業界 the national political scene 国内の政界 .5 (公衆の面前での )口論 , 口げんか ; 大騒ぎ make [create ] a scene 大騒ぎする .6 〖通例単数形で 〗(印象的な出来事が起きている )状況 ; 出来事 For years, the country has been the scene of terrible fighting .長年その国はひどい騒乱状況にある ▸ a bad scene ⦅米 くだけて ⦆困難で不快な状況 .7 ⦅くだけた話 ⦆〖通例否定文で; one's 好み, 関心 We just thought it wasn't your scene .私たちはそれがあなたの好みじゃないと思ったんです .a ch nge of sc ne change 名詞 3 .behind the sc nes 1 秘密裏に, ひそかに .2 (映画製作 TV放送などの )舞台裏で, 裏側で .m ke the sc ne やってくる, 登場する ; 派手にやる .on the sc ne 〈人が 〉 (ある状況に )登場して ; かかわって .s t the sc ne 1 «…が起こる » 下地を作る, 準備をする «for » .2 状況説明をする, (人に )予備知識を与える To set the scene for this debate,この討論のために状況をお話ししますと ….st al the sc ne 〈脇役が 〉人気をさらう .~́ st aler 人気をさらう脇役 .~́ st aling (脇役などが )人気をさらうこと .

 

scenery

scen er y /síːn (ə )ri /scene 名詞 U 1 (山 湖などの美しい )景色 , 景観, 風景 (!ある地方の )自然の風景全体をいう; 一地点からの限られた眺めはscene ) great [moving, spectacular, stunning ] scenery すばらしい景色 2 舞台背景 [装置 ]appropriate scenery ぴったりの舞台装置 .a ch nge of sc nery change 名詞 3 .

 

sceneshifter

sc ne sh fter 名詞 C 〘劇 〙道具方, 大道具係 .