We have no meanings for "marks a stage" in our records yet.
1 The increase in the impedimenta of life only marks a stage .
2 The act itself marks a stage in the downward course of William's character.
3 The admission of these exceptions to the general rule certainly marks a stage of intellectual progress.
4 The recognition of Jean-Christophe as a book which marks a stage in progress was instantaneous in France.
5 That marks a stage in progress.
6 But it not the less marks a stage , and one of the greatest stages, in the history of the Empire.
7 Meanwhile the streets through which he walked had the empty, listless air which marks a stage from which the actors have departed.
8 The struggle between Marius and Sulla, decided as it was by the sword, marks a stage in the decline of the Roman Republic.
9 So much, at any rate, of the school appears wherever there is a written language, and its presence marks a stage in the civilizing process.
10 "Lear" marks a stage in Shakespeare's agony.
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