To perform for an audience.
To assume, adopt or affect; to behave in a particular way as a pretense.
To don (clothing, equipment, or the like).
To initiate cooking or warming, especially on a stovetop.
To organize a performance for an audience.
To fool, kid, deceive.
Used other than figuratively or idiomatically: see put, on.
To bet on.
To play (a recording).
To produce on a stage, to perform a play.
To demonstrate in a deceptive manner.
To orchestrate; to carry out.
To place in position to prepare for use.
To determine what stage (a disease, etc.) has progressed to
To jettison a spent stage of a multistage rocket or other launch vehicle and light the engine(s) of the stage above it.
A platform; a surface, generally elevated, upon which show performances or other public events are given.
One of the portions of a device (such as a rocket or thermonuclear weapon) which are used or activated in a particular order, one after another.
A floor or storey of a house.
The number of an electronic circuit’s block, such as a filter, an amplifier, etc.
A stagecoach, an enclosed horsedrawn carriage used to carry passengers.
A place where anything is publicly exhibited, or a remarkable affair occurs; the scene.
The succession of rock strata laid down in a single age on the geologic time scale.
A phase.
The place on a microscope where the slide is located for viewing.
An internship.
A platform, often floating, serving as a kind of wharf.
A level; one of the sequential areas making up the game.
A floor elevated for the convenience of mechanical work, etc.; scaffolding; staging.