English edit

Alternative forms edit

Etymology edit

stage +‎ dive

Noun edit

stagedive (plural stagedives)

  1. A leap from the stage of a concert onto the audience below.
    • 2014, The Jesus Lizard Book, page 163:
      I also heard Yow's boots later that night after a particularly tangled stagedive.

Verb edit

stagedive (third-person singular simple present stagedives, present participle stagediving, simple past and past participle stagedived)

  1. To leap from the stage of a concert onto the audience below.
    • 1998, John M. Rocco, Brian Rocco, The Nirvana Companion, page 131:
      I deserve to get raped by a crowd if I stagedive in a dress, I deserve to get raped if I go to a bar and I'm wearing a bikini, I deserve to get raped because I did all these things I said before — nipping a hot young rock star in the bud, having a baby, having been a stripper, having used drugs.
    • 2004, Brian Edge, 924 Gilman: The Story So Far, page 17:
      People invented new and silly ways to dance and stagedive, and bands like Isocracy—made up of Gilman volunteers—came up with numerous stunts to keep themselves and the audience entertained at their shows ( this usually involved a lot of throwing stuff back and forth).
    • 2010, Steven Blush, George Petros, American Hardcore, page 192:
      In New York, people didn't even know how to stagedive.

Swedish edit

 
Swedish Wikipedia has an article on:
Wikipedia sv

Etymology edit

Borrowed from English stagedive.

Noun edit

stagedive c

  1. a stagedive
    göra en stagedive
    do a stage dive

Declension edit

Declension of stagedive 
Singular Plural
Indefinite Definite Indefinite Definite
Nominative stagedive stagediven stagedives, stagedivar stagedivarna
Genitive stagedives stagedivens stagedives, stagedivars stagedivarnas

Related terms edit