| play |
A move or series of moves that can be made in one turn.
Ãâó: www.bcvs.ukf.net/gvcp.htm
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| play t. |
a method of psychotherapy used in treating children, in which play is used to a considerable extent as the means of communication between the child and therapist, enabling self-expression and the revealing of unconscious material.
Ãâó: www.mercksource.com/pp/us/cns/cns_health_library.j...
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| play |
The main consequence of deconstructing, inverting, subverting and perverting any system is that the law turns into rule and the system turns into play.
Ãâó: www.a-studio.nl/en/writings/abc/
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| play |
n. a dramatic composition or performance; a drama. Gustav Freytag, a German critic, proposed an analysis of the typical structure of a five-act play as composed of rising action, climax, and falling action. 2
Ãâó: station05.qc.ca/csrs/bouscol/anglais/book_report/g...
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| play |
a traditional piece of drama in which an actor or group of actors perform a scripted story on stage in front of a live audience, often using makeup or costumes to more closely resemble the characters they portray
Ãâó: www.iclasses.org/assets/literature/literary_glossa...
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| play | use or move |
|---|---|
| play | shoot or hit in a particular manner |
| play | bet or wager (money) |
| play | put (a card or piece) into play during a game, or act strategically as if in a card game |
| play | stake on the outcome of an issue |
| play | make bets |
| play | use to one's advantage |
| play | discharge or direct or be discharged or directed as if in a continuous stream |
| play | manipulate manually or in one's mind or imagination |
| play | cause to happen or to occur as a consequence |
| play | perform on a certain location |
| play | be performed |
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