A stage is one part of a race that's divided into several stages, or days of racing. A flat is a flat tire, a puncture. If a rider gets a flat he has to stop riding until his support car catches up with him and provides him with a new wheel or a new bike, after which he has to ride hard to catch up with the rest of the races. This usually spoils the rider's chance of winning that stage, but might still allow him to win the overall race. At amateur level the rider might have to fix his own flat along the roadside. A star rider might call for one of his team members to trade bikes with him, allowing the star rider to continue while leaving the support rider to wait for the support canr.
The stage is the flat piece that the slides are placed on. The two stage clips hold the slide down.
The mature stage of river development is characterized by flat floodplains. During this stage, the river has carved a wide valley and deposited sediment along its banks, creating a broad, flat floodplain that may experience periodic flooding.
A stage on a microscope is a flat platform where the specimen slide is placed for viewing. It usually has clips or a mechanical stage to hold the slide in place and allow for precise movement of the specimen under the objective lenses for observation.
The flat surface of a microscope that holds the slide for viewing is called the stage. It is where the specimen slide is placed for examination under the microscope's lens.
Go to stage builder and choose the biggest stage and make a flat stage
Stage 12 on the 13th July
The mature stage of river development is characterized by flat flood plains where the river meanders and deposits sediment. In this stage, the river has a large volume of water and is more stable, leading to the creation of wide flood plains.
You place the object on the stage of the microscope when you are viewing it. The stage is the flat platform where the specimen is positioned for observation under the lens.
flat, grade, stage, round, floor,
you place it on the stage (the platform with a hole in it), underneath the stage clips.
Keeping the stage flat prevents the liquid from spilling and maintains a consistent depth across the viewing field. Tilting the stage can cause the liquid to flow unevenly, affecting the quality of the observation and potentially damaging the microscope equipment.
The stage of a microscope is the small flat platform upon which you mount your specimen slides. Stage clips - usually a pair, are designed to hold the specimen slide securely in place.