[
US
/ˈsinɝi/
]
[ UK /sˈiːnəɹi/ ]
[ UK /sˈiːnəɹi/ ]
NOUN
-
the painted structures of a stage set that are intended to suggest a particular locale
they worked all night painting the scenery - the appearance of a place
How To Use scenery In A Sentence
- Maybe they should have a little log cabin, a hayride at Halloween, or Christmas scenery.
- So far the scenery around her had been thick fur trees and dense foliage.
- We turned north along the Shyok gorge and passed through some of the most incredible scenery that any of us had witnessed.
- Go most urgent, is the most beautiful scenery; hurt the most are always the most real emotions.
- There may also have been some influence from painted scenery used in the theatre.
- We sat on the top deck and took in some impressive hillside scenery en route. Times, Sunday Times
- And Mike was hornswoggled enough to replace some of his martial graphics with a picture of some nice mountain scenery.
- Griffith made me realize something else: I was wondering how to film the exteriors, i.e. how to insert the characters into the scenery.
- Take in views of the Carmel Valley Hills and enjoy the spectacular scenery of the Monterey pine forests, rocky coastline and vistas of crashing surf, as a chorus of sea lions barks on the rocks.
- These "Observations" were the first of a series of volumes by Gilpin on the scenery of Great Britain, composed in a poetic and somewhat over-luxuriant style, illustrated by drawings in aquatinta, and all described on the title page as "Relative chiefly to Picturesque Beauty. A History of English Romanticism in the Eighteenth Century