drama
noun /ˈdrɑːmə/
  /ˈdrɑːmə/
Idioms - [countable] a play for the theatre, television or radio
- a costume/period/courtroom/crime drama
 - a powerful television drama about city life
 - a drama series set in an American dance academy
 
Wordfinder- act
 - cast
 - drama
 - entrance
 - exit
 - line
 - play
 - role
 - scene
 - speech
 
Wordfinder- chat show
 - documentary
 - drama
 - game show
 - news
 - programme
 - quiz
 - reality TV
 - sitcom
 - television
 
Wordfinder- comedy
 - denouement
 - dialogue
 - drama
 - dramatic irony
 - play
 - scene
 - set
 - soliloquy
 - speech
 
Extra ExamplesTopics Film and theatrea2, TV, radio and newsa2, Hobbiesa2- It is a lavish costume drama set in the early twentieth century.
 - The story easily fits into the standard mould of a courtroom drama.
 - a gritty police drama
 - Millions follow this hospital drama twice a week.
 - The movie is a heart-warming family drama.
 - She stars in a new one-hour drama about a woman judge.
 - a hard-hitting drama about a teenage pregnancy
 
Oxford Collocations Dictionaryadjective- compelling
 - powerful
 - gritty
 - …
 
- write
 - create
 - produce
 - …
 
- production
 - serial
 - series
 - …
 
- in a/the drama
 - drama about
 
 - [uncountable] plays considered as a form of literature
- classical/modern drama
 - a drama critic
 - a drama school/group
 - a drama student/teacher
 - I studied English and Drama at college.
 - It is a first-class piece of costume drama.
 
Wordfinder- author
 - book
 - classic
 - critic
 - drama
 - fiction
 - genre
 - literature
 - poetry
 - write
 
Extra ExamplesTopics Film and theatrea2, Educationa2- Television drama is a powerful cultural medium.
 - It is very difficult to write good drama.
 - He's a drama major at Howard University.
 
Oxford Collocations Dictionaryadjective- compelling
 - powerful
 - gritty
 - …
 
- write
 - create
 - produce
 - …
 
- production
 - serial
 - series
 - …
 
- in a/the drama
 - drama about
 
 - [countable] an exciting event
- A powerful human drama was unfolding before our eyes.
 
Extra Examples- a collection of people watching the drama unfold outside the nightclub
 - The actor was involved in a real-life drama when he was held up at gunpoint last night.
 
Oxford Collocations Dictionaryadjective- human
 - real-life
 
- play out
 - unfold
 
 - [uncountable] the fact of being exciting
- You couldn't help being thrilled by the drama of the situation.
 
Extra Examples- The argument added a touch of drama to an otherwise dull day.
 - The afternoon was full of drama and excitement.
 - Art should deal with the human drama and tragedy of everyday life.
 - The media loved all the drama surrounding their divorce.
 - The arrival of the police heightened the drama further.
 
Oxford Collocations Dictionaryadjective- high
 - human
 
- touch
 
- be full of
 - add
 - heighten
 - …
 
- surround something
 
- queen
 
- a moment of drama
 
 
Word Originearly 16th cent.: via late Latin from Greek drama, from dran ‘do, act’.
Idioms 
make a drama out of something 
- to make a small problem or event seem more important or serious than it really is