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Jump to: General, Art, Business, Computing, Medicine, Miscellaneous, Religion, Science, Slang, Sports, Tech, Phrases
We found 48 dictionaries with English definitions that include the word scene:
Click on the first link on a line below to go directly to a page where "scene" is defined.
General (33 matching dictionaries)
- scene: American Heritage Dictionary of the English Language [home, info]
- scene: Collins English Dictionary [home, info]
- scene: Vocabulary.com [home, info]
- scene: Macmillan Dictionary [home, info]
- scene: Merriam-Webster's Online Dictionary, 11th Edition [home, info]
- Scene, scene: Wordnik [home, info]
- scene: Cambridge Advanced Learner's Dictionary [home, info]
- Scene: Wiktionary [home, info]
- scene: Compact Oxford English Dictionary [home, info]
- scene: Webster's New World College Dictionary, 4th Ed. [home, info]
- scene: The Wordsmyth English Dictionary-Thesaurus [home, info]
- scene: Infoplease Dictionary [home, info]
- scene: Dictionary.com [home, info]
- scene: Online Etymology Dictionary [home, info]
- scene: UltraLingua English Dictionary [home, info]
- scene: Cambridge Dictionary of American English [home, info]
- scene: Cambridge International Dictionary of Idioms [home, info]
- Scene (BDSM), Scene (album), Scene (cultural), Scene (disambiguation), Scene (drama), Scene (fiction), Scene (film), Scene (filming), Scene (software), Scene (subculture), Scene (youth), Scene, The Scene (Canadian Band), The Scene (Entourage), The Scene (UK band), The Scene (band), The Scene (miniseries), The Scene (play), The Scene: Wikipedia, the Free Encyclopedia [home, info]
- Scene: Online Plain Text English Dictionary [home, info]
- scene: Webster's Revised Unabridged, 1913 Edition [home, info]
- scene: Rhymezone [home, info]
- scene: AllWords.com Multi-Lingual Dictionary [home, info]
- scene: Webster's 1828 Dictionary [home, info]
- scene: All About Homonyms [home, info]
- Scene: 1911 edition of the Encyclopedia Britannica [home, info]
- scene: Free Dictionary [home, info]
- scene: Mnemonic Dictionary [home, info]
- scene: WordNet 1.7 Vocabulary Helper [home, info]
- scene: LookWAYup Translating Dictionary/Thesaurus [home, info]
- scene: Dictionary/thesaurus [home, info]
- scene: Wikimedia Commons US English Pronunciations [home, info]
Art (4 matching dictionaries)
- SCENE: Technical Glossary of Theatre Terms [home, info]
- Scene: Movie Terminology Glossary [home, info]
- scene: Literary Criticism [home, info]
- Scene: Jazz Humor [home, info]
Business (1 matching dictionary)
- Scene (disambiguation), scene: Legal dictionary [home, info]
Computing (1 matching dictionary)
- Scene (disambiguation), scene: Encyclopedia [home, info]
Medicine (2 matching dictionaries)
- scene: online medical dictionary [home, info]
- Scene (cultural): Medical dictionary [home, info]
Miscellaneous (4 matching dictionaries)
- scene: Sound-Alike Words [home, info]
- SCENE: Acronym Finder [home, info]
- SCENE: AbbreviationZ [home, info]
- scene: Idioms [home, info]
Slang (1 matching dictionary)
- Scene (Kid), Scene, scene, the scene: Urban Dictionary [home, info]
Tech (2 matching dictionaries)
- Scene: Sweetwater Music [home, info]
- scene: Television: Critical Methods and Applications [home, info]
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Quick definitions from Macmillan ()
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Provided by
Quick definitions from WordNet (scene)
▸ noun: graphic art consisting of the graphic or photographic representation of a visual percept ( "He painted scenes from everyday life")
▸ noun: a consecutive series of pictures that constitutes a unit of action in a film
▸ noun: a subdivision of an act of a play ( "The first act has three scenes")
▸ noun: an incident (real or imaginary) ( "Their parting was a sad scene")
▸ noun: the place where some action occurs ( "The police returned to the scene of the crime")
▸ noun: the painted structures of a stage set that are intended to suggest a particular locale ( "They worked all night painting the scenery")
▸ noun: the context and environment in which something is set
▸ noun: a situation treated as an observable object ( "The religious scene in England has changed in the last century")
▸ noun: a display of bad temper ( "He made a scene")
▸ noun: the visual percept of a region
▸ Word origin
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