All 12 Uses
monologue
in
Betrayed: A House of Night Novel
(Auto-generated)
- He was away from the school for the yearly Shakespeare monologue competition.†
Chpt 2 *monologue = a long uninterrupted speech
- He has gone to our East Coast school to support our students who are in the final round of our international Shakespearean monologue contest.†
Chpt 11
- I could not believe I'd totally blown off the fact that Erik was performing the Shakespearian monologue he'd taken to the competition.†
Chpt 19
- The drama teacher, Professor Nolan, came out onstage and spent a while explaining the importance of actors being trained in the classics, and talking about how prestigious the Shakespeare monologue contest is for vamps around the world.†
Chpt 19
- Each will perform their competition monologue.†
Chpt 19
- Prof Nolan announced that Kaci had placed fifty-second in the competition with her rendition of Beatrice's monologue from Much Ado About Nothing.†
Chpt 19
- I recognized it because I'd chosen it as the monologue I memorized my freshman year at SIHS.†
Chpt 19
- Professor Nolan introduced Deino, saying that she'd finished an amazing eleventh overall, and then Deino began Cleopatra's death scene monologue.†
Chpt 19
- Please give him the hero's welcome he deserves for placing first in the International Shakespearian Monologue Competition!†
Chpt 19
- Erik paused in his monologue, and moved forward until he was standing at the edge of the stage, so close that if I stood I could reach up and touch him.†
Chpt 19
- And I remembered that's what she'd said during the monologue performance.†
Chpt 22
- I saw someone I thought was that Cassie Kramme girl who'd done so well in the monologue competition making snow angels with a couple other girls.†
Chpt 25
Definitions:
-
(1)
(monologue) a long speech by one person, whether it's a dramatic speech in a play, a run-on talk that keeps others from getting a word in, or a comedian's continuous stream of jokes and stories delivered aloneAlthough less frequently used, "monolog" is also a correct spelling in the United States.
- (2) (meaning too rare to warrant focus)