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dramatics

[ US /dɹəˈmætɪks/ ]
[ UK /dɹəmˈætɪks/ ]
NOUN
  1. participation in theatrical productions as an extracurricular activity
  2. the art of writing and producing plays

How To Use dramatics In A Sentence

  • After lying on the floor in a fit of dramatics I realized what I had thought - pinky toe.
  • I don't really agree with some of Cosby's reasoning or melodramatics, but his crux is excellent.
  • Dramatics seem to have been part of a student's life early in the history of the University, surprisingly, because attendance at the theatre was forbidden.
  • There are no dramatics, no singed eyebrows, no binned masterpieces.
  • My childhood and adolescence were a joyous outpouring of energy, a ceaseless quest for expression, skill, and experience. School was only a background to the supreme delight of lessons in music, dance, and dramatics, and the thrill of sojourns in the country, theaters, concerts.
  • SPORTS, DANCE, music, dramatics and arts are some fields in which the physically and mentally challenged can prove that they are second to none.
  • In recent years, it has been used for everything from amateur dramatics to business conferences to the counting of general election votes.
  • He had a finger in every pie at school, from dramatics to football.
  • He has had a distinguished career in dramatics, having been the first post-war President of the Oxford University Dramatic Society, and Governor of the Shakespeare Memorial Theatre, and subsequently he achieved fame as Author, Playwright and Actor-Manager. The British Council
  • When their children's passion for amateur dramatics had come to dominate the family's spare time, the Kellys moved to a home neighbouring the local theatre, where their mother had taken a job in the box office.
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