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Trimester 3 Vocab Week 4
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aside In a play, a comment made by a character who is heard by the audience but not by the other characters on stage. Example: Romeo and Juliet, Act I Scene I: Sampson (aside to Gregory): “Is the law on our side if I say ay?” Gregory (aside to Sampson): “No.”
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comic relief A humorous scene, incident, character, or bit of dialogue occurring after some serious or tragic moment. Deliberately designed to relieve emotional intensity (lighten the mood)
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couplet Two consecutive lines of poetry that rhyme Example:
“The which if you with patient ears attend, What here shall miss, our toil shall strive to mend.” -Shakespeare, Romeo and Juliet
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dramatic conventions Any dramatic device which, though it departs from reality, is understood and accepted by the audience as representing reality. Example: An audience can “accept” the fact that a character has aged 10 years within a matter of minutes. -In one scene, the character is shown as a 10-year-old boy playing in the yard; in another scene moments later, the same character is shown as a 20-year-old man leaving for military service.
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dramatic monologue A poem (or long speech) in which a speaker addresses one or more silent listeners, typically revealing their innermost thoughts and feelings about a specific problem or situation
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soliloquy Long speech in which a character is alone onstage, expressing his or her thoughts aloud Example: Juliet’s balcony scene in Act II of Romeo and Juliet
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sonnet A type of lyric poem with 14 lines and regular rhyme schemes
Ends with a couplet
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