Set: Dramatic Literary Terms (Othello)

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With group: Trimester 3 Study Guides: DSST Sophomores
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All 21 terms

TermDefinition
DialogueSpeech between two or more characters on stage
MonologueA long speech delivered by a character during a dialogue
SoliloquyA stage convention in which a character is not speaking to anyone but is thinking out loud and thus speaking the truth as far as he or she understands it
AsideSpeech which only the audience can hear (a character's thoughts out loud) and which the other characters on stage cannot hear
ProseEveryday speech, without specific rules of rhyme or rhythm
Rhymed VerseUsually end rhyme, with a pattern of aa, bb
Blank VerseThe verse Shakespeare most often emplys in his plays - unrhymed and each line has 10 syllables and had iambic pentameter
Iambic PentameterRhythm based on iambs = "foot" (one stressed syllable followed by a stressed syllable). A measure of five of these feet.
PunA play on words. Usually funny use of words that has more than one meaning
MotifThe repetition of an idea or theme in a work of literature
Medias ResActions on the stage begin "in the middle"
Dramatic QuestionThe central question that lingers on the audience's mind at the end of each scene. Based on the plat events that have unfolded on stage, the audience is wondering how these events will affect the future of the play
Tragic HeroA male or female character who must experience a tragic reversal (situation changes from good to bad)
Free WillA character's own action, the opposite of fate
Tragic FlawThe flaw that causes the hero's fall -proof that no human is perfect
HubrisThe flaw of incredible arrogance, or an overwhelming egotism that blinds the hero to reality
Dramatic IronyA time in the play when the audience possess knowledge that the character does not
CatharsisA release of emotions that the audience experiences during a tragedy
Fate Vs. Free WillWhen the hero blames fate for their downfall, however free will is a vital aspect of a tragedy - THEME
Blindness Vs. SightA large ego (arrogance) often blinds people from reality, and blind people are even able to "see" more - THEME
Ignorance Vs. KnowledgeIgnorance can often blind people from acting a certain way rather than if they had the full knowledge - THEME

Set Information

Terms 21
Creator elizabethwiggans
Created April 2, 2009
Group Trimester 3 Study Guides: DSST Sophomores
Subjects None
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Most Missed Words

  1. Blank Verse The verse Shakespeare most often emplys in his plays - unrhymed and each line has 10 syllables and had iambic pentameter - 14 misses
  2. Aside Speech which only the audience can hear (a character's thoughts out loud) and which the other characters on stage cannot hear - 12 misses
  3. Medias Res Actions on the stage begin "in the middle" - 10 misses
  4. Blindness Vs. Sight A large ego (arrogance) often blinds people from reality, and blind people are even able to "see" more - THEME - 10 misses
  5. Soliloquy A stage convention in which a character is not speaking to anyone but is thinking out loud and thus speaking the truth as far as he or she understands it - 9 misses
  6. Hubris The flaw of incredible arrogance, or an overwhelming egotism that blinds the hero to reality - 9 misses
  7. Iambic Pentameter Rhythm based on iambs = "foot" (one stressed syllable followed by a stressed syllable). A measure of five of these feet. - 8 misses