off-stage in English

adjective
1
(in a theater) not on the stage and so not visible to the audience.
Stars of the musical theatre (of which I am one) channel their offstage misery into on stage triumph.

Use "off-stage" in a sentence

Below are sample sentences containing the word "off-stage" from the English Dictionary. We can refer to these sentence patterns for sentences in case of finding sample sentences with the word "off-stage", or refer to the context using the word "off-stage" in the English Dictionary.

1. Hamlet goes off stage left.

2. Hong Dao is off-stage

3. A trumpet sounded off stage.

4. She fascinated him, both on and off stage.

5. She was a shy and retiring person off-stage.

6. The orchestra went on/off stage to great applause.

7. 8 They marched off stage to the sound of trumpets.

8. Despite their bitter screen rivalry, off-stage they are close friends.

9. Cue definition, anything said or done, on or off stage, that is followed by a specific line or action: An off-stage door slam was his Cue to enter

10. Even his softly spoken voice suggests a reticence toward off-stage communication.

11. like a hundred years off stage ago and stay for a day

12. Be sure to exert as much energy during the blast off stage.

13. Their footsteps rang hollow in the register office like a bad comic going off stage.

14. I always thought that singers were outgoing By definition—until I saw how shy you are off-stage.

15. Wounded loyalty and dignified pathos were her line on stage, although off-stage she grew increasingly self-assertive.

16. Coda is a boutique production company and booking agency dedicated to raising the bar for live entertainment in Colorado, both on and off stage

17. His career suffered a slow start, as he was booed off stage several times, once even having a piece of chicken thrown at him.

18. The fight between the two armies is simulated by rowdy noises made off-stage (alarums or alarms) while actors walk on-stage, deliver their lines, and exit.

19. Aeschylus seems also to have been an enthusiastic adopter of new theatrical features, such as the ekkyklēma (a revolving platform on which prop corpses would have been rolled out after grisly off-stage action), a door in the skēnē (a stage-building) and dramatic costumes

20. The song ended in a Caterwaul of feedback as they stumbled off stage, leaving in their wake trashed guitars and a bemused Jonathan Ross.: They raised such a Caterwaul when Thompson entered a Burmese in a San Francisco show in 1938 that he withdrew from the proceedings.: The words Britain's best young spellers found most difficult were rankle, Caterwaul, pleasurable and totem.