*Scenery shifting methods
yes
on pageant wagons.
A pageant wagon was used as a place for actors who were not associated with the church to perform. It was basically a stage on wheels. The players (actors) would take their pageant wagons all over Europe and perform to the public. The plays were usually presented in a comedic manner and that is why lots of people would go and see the performances.
Audiences. Medieval plays were sometimes performed for royalty or nobility as a part of a feast or entertainment, but they were also performed on wagons during fairs, where they were seen by everyone of all classes.
A mystery play is a kind of f vernacular drama in Europe during the Middle Ages. It was played on pageant wagons which provided both scaffold stage and dressing room.
Pioneer cargo wagons are called Conestoga wagons.
Because the tops of the wagons reminded people of ships at sea.
The Covered Wagons were made so the pioneers would not have to walk, and carry their belonging on their back. Some types of wagons are the Farm Imigrant Wagons, and the Conestoga Wagons. Also to get west.
Conestoga Wagons.
The wagons carried the food such as flour, sugar, bacon, and coffee. The trade items were also in the wagons.
wagons I guess ... they were constega wagons
The plural of wagon is wagons. As in "the wagons were drawn by horses".
the people riding the wagons
* Use wagon to carry people places. * To go to diffrent places. * wagons are also used to carry food. * Wagons wear use in a long time ago. * They were called wood and cloth. * Wagons might be slow but you wont get as much tierd as you get when you go walking. * In 4 wagons there could fit 20 persons. * Wagons are made out of wood. * People also use wagons to go camping. * Wagons are good to carry lots of thing inside them.
Some slept in the wagons. Others slept on the ground in between the wagons and the fire pits.
There is no standard collective noun for a group of wagons. A collective noun is an informal part of language and any noun that is suitable can function as a collective noun; for example, a circle of wagons, a train of wagons, a convoyof wagons, etc.
They were called Covered Wagons.