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The phrase "a wide stage" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used to describe a physical stage that has a large width, often in the context of theater, performances, or events.
Example: "The play was performed on a wide stage, allowing for elaborate set designs and dynamic movements by the actors."
Alternatives: "a broad stage" or "an expansive stage".
Exact(9)
On a wide stage stands a white box/room; the wall towards the auditorium is missing.
The typical 16th-century corral had a wide stage that extended across a courtyard.
The old-fashioned dais has been banished, replaced by a wide stage with a podium that retracts into the floor.
In 1947, she designed Guthrie's Covent Garden production of Peter Grimes, stretching the dank fishing village across a wide stage.
"We have a clear idea of the future," he said in his presentation, strutting across a wide stage flanked by two new Nissan subcompact cars.
Anchee, her mouth fixed in a wide stage smile and her back as straight as the barrel of a rifle, leaps and twirls across the room, whispering encouragement -- keep your head up, hold your arms straighter, keep smiling" -- to Lauryann, who is wobbly but determined.
Similar(51)
He is perforce becoming a player on a wider stage.
Then putting those values on a wider stage".
"I felt like it needed a wider stage, a bigger expanse," he said.
Some talked about the difficulty of transferring his hard-edged urban personality to a wider stage.
And her successes are on a wider stage than the Iran negotiations.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com