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Studio   /stˈudiˌoʊ/   Listen
Studio

noun
(pl. studios)
1.
Workplace for the teaching or practice of an art.  "The music department provided studios for their students" , "You don't need a studio to make a passport photograph"
2.
An apartment with a living space and a bathroom and a small kitchen.  Synonym: studio apartment.
3.
Workplace consisting of a room or building where movies or television shows or radio programs are produced and recorded.



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"Studio" Quotes from Famous Books



... for my masterpiece, he murmured, she was beautiful, but had not the face of that Angel. How came I to copy the image in my heart and not the living one that for months was each day here in my studio. ...
— Futurist Stories • Margery Verner Reed

... painter, whose pictures were sometimes rejected in the Academy, but who was a little lion in the minor exhibitions, came once a week to give her lessons, and when she went to town she called at his studio with her sketches. Mr. Hoskin's studio was near the King's Road, the last of a row of red houses, with gables, cross- beams, and palings. He was a good-looking, blond man, somewhat inclined to the poetical and melancholy type; his hair bristled, and ...
— Celibates • George Moore

... received Captain Cai in his workshop—a room ample enough for a studio and lit by a large window that faced north, but darkened by cobwebs, dirty, and incredibly littered with odds and ends of futile apparatus. He put a watchmaker's glass to his eye and peered long into the bowels of the ...
— Hocken and Hunken • A. T. Quiller-Couch

... nature and no amount of military service could crush the chief aspirations of his intelligence. He had not abandoned work since he had joined the Zouaves, for his hours of leisure from duty were passed in his studio. But the change in his outward appearance was connected with a similar development in his character. He himself sometimes wondered how he could have ever taken any interest in the half-hearted political fumbling which Donna Tullia, Ugo Del Ferice, and others of their set used to ...
— Sant' Ilario • F. Marion Crawford

... enough with a little domestic quarrel in a studio.... The story shifts suddenly, however, to a brilliantly told tragedy of the Italian Renaissance embodied in a girl's portrait ... which speaks and affects the life of the modern people who hear it.... The many readers who like Mr. De Morgan will enjoy ...
— The Squirrel-Cage • Dorothy Canfield


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