Respuesta :
1. Iambic Pentameter: type of poetic meter, each line has 10 syllables total and are divided into 5 pairs of alternating stressed and unstressed syllables.
2. prose : regular speech without rhyme or meter; may have used it to show lower social class or humor
3. allusion: reference to a famous person or thing
4. aside: short series of lines delivered by a character directly to the audience or another character but not heard by all characters onstage
5. comedy: professional entertainment consisting of jokes and satirical sketches, intended to make an audience laugh; the play is an example of this
6. stage directions: tells the actors in a play what to do as they act out the drama, not spoken by actors
7. pun: Helena: I bid you farewell.
[Exit Helena.]
8. theme: central message or insight into life revealed by a literary work.
9. parallel plots: two or more plots within one story that are linked by common characters, conflicts, or themes
10. irony: 3 types: (dramatic) audience or reader knows what is going to happen, but the character does not (verbal) a contrast between what is stated and what is meant (situational) what is expected to happen and what actually happens.
2. prose : regular speech without rhyme or meter; may have used it to show lower social class or humor
3. allusion: reference to a famous person or thing
4. aside: short series of lines delivered by a character directly to the audience or another character but not heard by all characters onstage
5. comedy: professional entertainment consisting of jokes and satirical sketches, intended to make an audience laugh; the play is an example of this
6. stage directions: tells the actors in a play what to do as they act out the drama, not spoken by actors
7. pun: Helena: I bid you farewell.
[Exit Helena.]
8. theme: central message or insight into life revealed by a literary work.
9. parallel plots: two or more plots within one story that are linked by common characters, conflicts, or themes
10. irony: 3 types: (dramatic) audience or reader knows what is going to happen, but the character does not (verbal) a contrast between what is stated and what is meant (situational) what is expected to happen and what actually happens.