n
Alternative form of A-story [(authorship) The main plot in a story, especially a television show.]
n
(comics) A panel without dialog (speech bubbles or the like) and no significant visual changes to the previous panel, symbolizing passing of time.
n
(film, television) A beatscript.
n
The music charts published by Billboard magazine.
n
(theater) The script of a musical or opera.
n
(cinematography, television) A piece of text appearing on screen as a subtitle or other part of a film or broadcast, describing dialogue (and sometimes other sound) for viewers who cannot hear.
n
A constructed script or writing system, especially for use with a conlang.
n
(writing, linguistics) A new writing system specifically created by an individual or group, rather than having evolved as part of a language or culture as a natural script.
n
The 1623 published collection of William Shakespeare's plays. The first such collection printed in folio format.
n
A booklet containing a sequence of near-identical images so that flipping rapidly through the pages produces an illusion of animation.
adj
(journalism, of a newspaper or magazine article) covering an entire page.
n
(historical) A kind of ancient Roman paper, eleven inches wide, mainly used for sacred books and writings.
n
(theater) A unit of script length, comprising 42 lines.
n
Synonym of small seal script
n
A sentence of dialogue, especially in a play, movie, or the like.
n
(authorship) A very short summary of a script or screenplay.
n
(by extension) An audio recording for the same purpose; a jingle.
n
(cartooning, manga, anime) A cartoon icon; a symbol used to indicate emotion, movement, etc. in a drawing; especially one used in or associated with Japanese-style manga.
n
A book, composition or any other document, written by hand (or manually typewritten), not mechanically reproduced.
n
A series (of books, films, etc.) consisting of several subseries.
n
A book containing mug shots, pictures of faces.
n
(television, film, comics) A television program, film, or comic book that is not part of a series.
n
(film) A prose telling of a story intended to be turned into a screenplay; generally longer and more detailed than a treatment.
n
(screenwriting) A descriptor or modifier enclosed within parentheses and put, indented, in a line of dialogue to describe how it should be acted or directed onscreen.
n
A set of Pecha Kucha talks all given together in one sitting.
n
The script for a theatrical play.
n
The text of a play (dramatic work).
n
An annotated copy of a script used by a prompter
n
(screenwriting) a session used to throw out ideas to add punch to a script, prior to commencement of filming, such as more jokes for a comedy film.
n
(authorship) A script for a story to be produced as a radio show, such as a radio drama.
adj
Resembling or characteristic of a record (historical document, etc.).
n
(film, television) The technique of preparing a plot but leaving the actors to improvise their own dialogue.
n
(dated) Running script; xingshu.
n
(comics) A comic that has been scanned, translated, and with translation overlaid onto the original text to produce a second-language version of the comic; a scanlated comic.
n
A screenplay itself, or an outline or a treatment of it.
n
(authorship, cinematography) A script for a movie or a television show.
n
The art of writing screenplays.
n
A person who writes books or documents by hand as a profession.ᵂ
n
(obsolete) The contents of a scrip, or wallet.
n
(countable, obsolete) A writing; a written document.
n
(computing) A small script, especially a section of Java code embedded in JavaServer Pages code.
n
(cinematography) A written work by a movie or television screenwriter that combines elements of a script and treatment, especially the dialogue elements, which are formatted the same as in a screenplay.
n
A person who writes scripts.
n
The writing of scripts, usually for film or television.
n
(archaic) A scribe or clerk.
n
(usually) Synonym of small seal script
n
(art, comics) A form of art where the content is presented in a series of artistic items positioned in a specific order to convey its message or effect, such as a comic strip.
n
A work, such as a work of fiction, published in installments, often numbered and without a specified end.
v
To write a television program, novel, or other form of entertainment as a sequence of shorter works with a common story.
n
(authorship) A screenplay for a movie that is shopped or sold on the open market, as opposed to one commissioned by a studio or production company.
n
A page of a comic book that is mostly or entirely taken up by a single image or panel.
n
An extended or continuing storyline in episodic storytelling media such as television or comic books.
n
Alternative form of storyline [(authorship) The plot of a story.]
n
The creation of a storyline.
n
A document issued by a publisher informing authors how to style their works for publication.
n
(authorship) A script formatted like a screenplay, but written to be made into an episode of a television show.
n
a playwright who writes for television
n
The script for a television production.
n
(narratology) In full through line of action: a theme that runs through the plot of a book, film, or other narrative work, or a series of such related works.
n
(countable, film) A brief, third-person, present-tense summary of a proposed film.
n
A short volume (publication)
n
Lines in a script for a performance.
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