英単語

stageの意味・使い方・発音

stage

英 [steɪdʒ] 美 [stedʒ]
  • n.ステージ;舞台;劇場;駅馬車
  • vt.舞台を持つ;演出する;計画する
  • vi.保持する;演出に適するようにする;駅馬車で移動する
  • n. (舞台)人名;(英)Stitch

語源


stage ステージ、劇場、舞台、時代、状態

古フランス語のestage、舞台、床、駅馬車、休憩所から、ヴァルガ?ラテン語の*staticum、立つ、stareから、語源的にはstand、状態と同じ。

英語の語源


stage
stage: [13] A stage (like a stable) is etymologically a ‘standing-place’. The word comes via Old French estage from Vulgar Latin *staticum ‘standing-place, position’, a derivative of Latin stāre ‘stand’ (to which English stand is distantly related). By the time it arrived in English it had acquired the additional connotation of a ‘set of positions one above the other’, and this led to its use in the more concrete senses ‘storey, floor’ and ‘raised platform’.

The specific application to a ‘platform in a theatre’ emerged in the mid-16th century. The sense ‘section of a journey’ (on which stagecoach [17] is based) developed at the end of the 16th century, presumably on the analogy of physical levels succeeding one another in ‘steps’ or ‘tiers’; and the further metaphoricization to ‘step in development’ took place in the 19th century.

=> stand
stage (n.)
mid-13c., "story of a building;" early 14c., "raised platform used for public display" (also "the platform beneath the gallows"), from Old French estage "building, dwelling place; stage for performance; phase, stage, rest in a journey" (12c., Modern French étage "story of a house, stage, floor, loft"), from Vulgar Latin *staticum "a place for standing," from Latin statum, past participle of stare "to stand," from PIE root *sta- "to stand, set down, make or be firm" (see stet). Meaning "platform for presentation of a play" is attested from late 14c.; generalized for "profession of an actor" from 1580s.

Sense of "period of development or time in life" first recorded early 14c., probably from Middle English sense of "degree or step on the 'ladder' of virtue, 'wheel' of fortune, etc.," in parable illustrations and morality plays. Meaning "a step in sequence, a stage of a journey" is late 14c. Meaning "level of water in a river, etc." is from 1814, American English.

Stage-name is from 1727. Stage-mother (n.) in the overbearing mother-of-an-actress sense is from 1915. Stage-door is from 1761, hence Stage-Door Johnny "young man who frequents stage doors seeking the company of actresses, chorus girls, etc." (1907). Stage whisper, such as used by an actor on stage to be heard by the audience, first attested 1865. Stage-manage (v.) is from 1871.
stage (v.)
early 14c., "to erect, construct," from stage (n.). The meaning "put into a play" is from c. 1600; that of "put (a play) on the stage" first recorded 1879; general sense of "to mount" (a comeback, etc.) is attested from 1924. Related: Staged; staging.

例文


1. The action takes place on a steeply raked stage .
パフォーマンスは勾配の高いステージで行われます。

2.Each stage of the battle was carried off flawlessly.
戦闘の各段階は順調に進んでいる。

3.Atlantic City is the hot favourite to stage the fight.
このボクシングの試合は大西洋シティで行われるのが望ましい。

4.Howard wanted to be a popular singer,but stage fright crippled him.
ハワードはポップ歌手になりたいが、臆病で怖い。

5.The situation is long past the stage when anyone 's advice would help.
状況はとっくに変わっており、誰かアドバイスをすれば取り返せることではない。

頭文字