10be/come on the sceneTHEREto be or become involved in a situation, activity etc 出现,到来;参与,卷进
By then, there was a boyfriend on the scene.
到那时,她已经有一个男朋友了。
Examples from the Corpus
be/come on the scene• No doubt when the subsidycommissionerscame on the scene they were prevailed on to restoreassessments to approximately the levels of 1515.• By then, Wife Number Five had come on the scene.• Etty with her friendDolly Murchie, had come on the scene.• I try to explain that Charles was only four when I came on the scene.• All this quickness of mind, all her decisiveness had turned to mush when Mac came on the scene.• But we must keep in mind that millions of speciesarose and disappeared long before mankindcame on the scene.• That is where the plugger and pressofficercome on the scene.• By then, there was a boyfriend on the scene.
love scenes• The message is clear and concise and displays no verbosity that one would expect to find in more courtlylove scenes.• I had never had to do love scenes and neither had Kylie.• Her love scenes in this voyeuristic thriller are with the hot new actorBilly Baldwin.• Not even the love scenes between Guillaume Depardieu and Anne Brochet can lift the deeply entrenched gloom.• Were there any special rules for the love scenes?• For a while it was enough to heckle the love scenes and cackle at disasters.• These bits were the love scenes.• The love scenes between Fawcett and Boothe are straight out of a Harlequinnovel, all romance and yearning and achingpassion.
on the scene• In 1958 the three actors in the process were all on the scene.• Steve was just cleaning up when staff from inside Orsett Hospital at Grays, Essex, arrivedon the scene.• Meanwhile, unless his senses were awry from fear and pain, a newcomer had arrived on the scene.• But we must keep in mind that millions of speciesarose and disappeared long before mankind came on the scene.• Castro was explodingon the scene.• No, we didn't see it, but we were on the scene soon afterwards.
scene of• Harriet's house was a scene ofutter confusion.
bad scene• I mean, I was on stage when he left and it didn't look like a particularly bad scene to me.• Murdered on the street, strung out, a very bad scene.• It was a very bad scene at work today.
make a scene• I hate it when people make a scene in public.• Please don't talk so loudly. You're making a scene.• Rather than make a scene , I kept quiet and climbed in the back.
Originscene
(1500-1600)Frenchscène, from Latinscena, scaena“stage, scene”, from Greekskene“tent, building against which a play is performed, stage”