studio
noun /ˈstjuːdiəʊ/
/ˈstuːdiəʊ/
(plural studios)
- a television/recording studio
- a studio audience (= one in a studio, that can be seen or heard as a programme is broadcast)
- She has released eight studio albums.
Extra ExamplesTopics TV, radio and newsb1- I was doing a lot of studio work and remixing.
- The album was recorded in his home studio.
Oxford Collocations Dictionaryadjective- art
- artist’s
- design
- …
- audience
- executive
- head
- …
- in a/the studio
- The tour guide is showing a group of tourists around a movie studio.
- a film studio
Oxford Collocations Dictionaryadjective- art
- artist’s
- design
- …
- audience
- executive
- head
- …
- in a/the studio
- She works for a major Hollywood studio.
- a film/movie studio
- a studio executive
- I wanted to turn the room into an artist's studio.
- a sculptor’s studio
- He was hoping to convert the cellar into a photographic studio.
Oxford Collocations Dictionaryadjective- art
- artist’s
- design
- …
- audience
- executive
- head
- …
- in a/the studio
- a place where dancing is taught or where dancers practise
- a dance studio
Oxford Collocations Dictionaryadjective- art
- artist’s
- design
- …
- audience
- executive
- head
- …
- in a/the studio
- (British English also studio flat)(North American English also studio apartment)a small flat with one main room for living and sleeping in and usually a kitchen and bathroom
Word Originearly 19th cent.: from Italian, from Latin studium ‘painstaking application’.