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Discover LudwigThe phrase "age scene" is not correct and does not convey a clear meaning in written English.
It may be intended to refer to a scene depicting a certain age or stage in life, but without additional context, it is ambiguous.
Example: "The film's age scene highlighted the struggles of adolescence."
Alternatives: "age depiction" or "age representation".
Exact(2)
"You had the whole green, new age scene starting up, which turned out to be a fashion-oriented movement.
Blavatsky was a Russian emigre, uneducated but with enormous chutzpah who, between 1873, when she arrived in New York, and her death in 1891, dominated the fin de siecle New Age scene.
Similar(58)
One of the TV spots, "Music is adrenaline," was made by a New York director, David Lobser, and shows a space-age scene of dancing girls on spinning tops moving faster and faster to a beat.
You guys met as part of the all-ages scene there.
The kitschy sanctuary of sin quickly acquired a zealous congregation of inked urbanites, scruffy grad students, aging scene queens and, eventually, incognito celebrities.
"They understand the importance of an all ages scene, but there's a certain distance between the two groups".
It is changing, there are a lot of really cool women-fronted projects that are coming up, queer musicians, and there's a really amazing all-ages scene here.
Many new-age scene girls have long, straight or crimped hair, while the guys basically have the same hair as before except for that the over-the-eye look just isn't cool anymore.
Michael would have been exposed to this environment and these behaviors at an extremely early age, setting the scene for a lifetime of sleep disorders and drug dependencies.
There were space-age scenes of hoverships and conical mirror-glass hotels clinging to clifftops, all wrought with a decidedly retro air, as if taken straight from a Dan Dare comic.
Jerry arrived in Greenwich Village "at a time when the highest ambitions of most of its inhabitants were sexual," Ferrell writes, before launching into coming-of-age scenes that gently evoke those of another North Carolina novelist, Allan Gurganus, who followed another giddy bumpkin into the heady, prelapsarian days of bathhouse-and-disco-era Manhattan in his novel "Plays Well With Others" (1997).
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