Playwrights also use these types of speech: monologues, or long speeches delivered by one character to others; asides, or private remarks to another character or to the audience that are not heard by other characters onstage; and soliloquies, or speeches voicing a character's inner thoughts, not heard by others.
a line spoken by an actor not intended for others on stage
Playwrights also use these types of speech: monologues, or long speeches delivered by one character to others; asides, or private remarks to another character or to the audience that are not heard by other characters onstage; and soliloquies, or speeches voicing a character's inner thoughts, not heard by others.
a dramatic speech giving the illusion of unspoken reflection
Playwrights also use these types of speech: monologues, or long speeches delivered by one character to others; asides, or private remarks to another character or to the audience that are not heard by other characters onstage; and soliloquies, or speeches voicing a character's inner thoughts, not heard by others.
Shakespeare's noble characters often speak in a type of poetry called blank verse, consisting of unrhymed lines each containing five stressed syllables.
a metrical unit with stressed-unstressed syllables
For interest, Shakespeare varies his meter, as when he begins this line with a trochaic foot ( ' ˘ ): "List'ning their fear, I could not say 'Amen'" (II, ii, 28).
The action, or series of events, of a play is developed and ordered by an author so that it reaches a climax—the point at which the internal and external conflicts are greatest.
when the audience understands something the characters don't
Dramatic irony occurs when the words or actions of a character take on a meaning for the audience or readers different from the one the character intends.
incongruity between what is expected and what occurs
Dramatic irony occurs when the words or actions of a character take on a meaning for the audience or readers different from the one the character intends.
In Act IV, for example, images of banishment from an ideal world—shrieking, groaning, and bleeding—indicate that Macbeth's Scotland resembles an underworld region where the dead are punished.
the error of a hero in a drama that leads to his downfall
Shakespearean tragedy usually contains these elements:
• A central character of high rank and great personal quality, yet with a tragic flaw or weakness
Reading a Shakespearean tragedy is often uplifting despite the disasters that befall the hero. This positive experience results from the tragic impulse, which shows the tragic hero acting nobly.
While rhetorical devices will not replace sound reasoning and evidence, they can help to present your reasoning and evidence in a memorable and compelling way.
While rhetorical devices will not replace sound reasoning and evidence, they can help to present your reasoning and evidence in a memorable and compelling way.
Conduct any research needed to answer the concerns raised, and then develop and present an impromptu speech offering a rebuttal, or answer to your audience's critique of your argument.
Created on Fri Oct 23 10:19:26 EDT 2020
(updated Mon Jun 21 16:01:31 EDT 2021)
Sign up now (it’s free!)
Whether you’re a teacher or a learner,
Vocabulary.com can put you or your class
on the path to systematic vocabulary improvement.