Stage
The stadium is a masculine noun repairs to the word (male or female) that are found from the thirteenth century in" "with the meaning of" quarry in which it is exercised in the race " as well as in the phrase which means "swim" ( The St. Curne Palaye ). Nicole Oresme , in his French version of the of Aristotle , translated and "Milo wore an ox while the course of a ESTADE " Etymology and history of the word The rehabilitation of the word has occurred as was the custom in the sixteenth century, after the Latin stadium which designated the stadium, not far from 15 Greek (600 Greek feet) or 625 Roman feet, the eighth of miles , slightly less than 200 meters, and the quarry where they could "clean out the stadium (" the race to stage "), found in Pliny and Cicero. The Greek stadion is also a unit of measurement, whose exact value is subject to change since its original definition was either mythical or original subjective (length over which a man could run at the pace maximum - which is almost the definition of modern flat 200 meters - and a single breath, which is probably valid only for the gods). So later we built a long career that materialize materialize and the value of the linear stage. Originally, the word was a noun form derived from the adjective , meaning: who stands (stable, firm, speaking of a battle, fixed, stiff, speaking in a dress), itself derived the verb "estan" (): stand straight and firm, be stopped, fixed, stationary. Note that stadios translated ancient Greek word in both French expressions: once (stadia), twice (stadious) or a hundred times better (ekaton stadiosisin aristocrats Aristophanes, The Clouds) and in parallel, it means already career length of a stadium where the race is run, and also a dance floor (Euripides, Ion), or a game of chess or backgammon. According Eichhoff, all these expressions come from the Indo-European root "stha 'stand, stay, stay, give the Latin" stativus "and Sanskrit" sthatavyas. From its refurbishment the word "stage" has remained an antique word denoting the quarry used by the Greeks for the race or the unit length of 184 meters to its use in medicine in the early nineteenth century. English and medicine, could distinguish the three "stadiums" intermittent fever, three in physiology "stadiums" of muscle contraction. The word stadium has been used in French to translate stadium since 1810. It occurs with this meaning in the dictionary of the Academy in 1835 and in the Littr. Considered "identifiable period" of an evolving process, the word still used in medicine but also in geology: stage of relief, glacial stage. Thereafter psychologists got into the habit of using it to evoke the distinctive parts of an evolution. The disadvantage of this job is often done in the amalgam between the concept phase and the notion of time. Indeed, phase, by definition is the ability to identify a number of features at a given moment while the "stage psychological challenges the chronological succession of phases, the intersubject stability of their order of onset, continuity or discontinuity. For example, Freud employs German Entwicklungstufe ("development phase") or Entwicklungstadium ("development stage") which is translated by stage of development, while sometimes it was better to say phase of development. Thus, the psychoanalyst Jacques Lacan , who has particularly studied the "mirror stage", states in his writings we should say "the mirror phase." Finally, the modern sense, the best known, high walls around a landscaped lot for sports is a sense of recent onset. He goes to meetings organized by Baron Pierre de Coubertin between Racing Club de France and Stadiums U.S. which led to the organization of the Athens Olympics in 1896. The noun "stage" has several meanings: In the Greek antiquity , the stadium was a unit of length which was introduced in the time of the Ptolemies among the units of measurement in ancient Egypt , it amounted to about 157.5 meters. By extension, the word "stage" has been used for a career or an enclosure having a length measured "stage" (the unit above) and within which the Greeks were training for the race. This is a trail running longer than 600 Greek feet (about a little less than 200 meters). According to legend, the hero of Greek Heracles himself had set the distance for the race of the Olympic Games. Stages excavated by Greek archaeologists are a materialization of the linear stage of the Greeks, used as unit length. Already in Greece, was given the name of stadium, not only to the runway 200 meters intended for running surrounded by the spectators, but arranged to any location for a year. Nowadays, it's a sports field, designed for team sports ( football , rugby , cricket , etc..) or individual ( athletics ). It is often surrounded by grandstands for spectators. The athletics track is normally 400 meters (international standard set for the Olympic Games of 1948 ), twice 200 m, sometimes less for smaller stages. Bends, tight at the beginning of the century, have been rounded to facilitate the performance of athletes and help make other competitions within the track. By definition, in athletics, there are two types of tests: tests called "in phase" and testing "off-stage", that is to say all road races, trail running , cross country , etc. .. Example: "Students will stage on Wednesday." Point, level, degree: Common name
Teaching: measuring length in Ancient Greece
The track athletic
Modern: the sports stadium
The athletics
Pedagogy: the sport practiced in the stadium
Each of the separate periods of a process
Current Vocabulary
References
Notes
Related articles
External link

(1 votes, average: 4.00 out of 5, rated)