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what means dry?? in this sentence
the lead actor had the most massive dry in the history of theatre
what means 'dry'?
in encyclopedia
i could never find out dry as noun there are only adjective
Jan 25, 2017 8:15 AM
Answers · 6
2
The original expression is "to dry up". Your memory of your lines evaporates and leaves you like a dried-up and useless thing, unable to perform. But native English speakers are fond of turning verbs into nouns (for some reason), so "to dry up" turns into "to have a dry". And then we turn the noun back into a verb (for some reason), giving "to dry".
More info: https://www.theguardian.com/culture/2001/sep/05/artsfeatures.theatre
January 25, 2017
1
I believe that dry in this case refers to the moment when an actor/actress is on the stage and can't remember his/her words. This is called "dryness", or to be "drying on stage".
For example, I found an article about this feeling that says: "Yet every actor has experienced the awful sensation of "drying" on stage - that moment when, inexplicably, a line or word refuses to come to hand when you need it".
January 25, 2017
Speaking from a theatre background, yes we typically say an actor "dries" when they forget their lines.
Steve's answer is especially helpful - yes, we can use adjectives as nouns and so on.
January 25, 2017
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RYU
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Chinese (Mandarin), English, Japanese, Korean
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