Drama Terminology 10: General Terms
Drama Terminology 10: General Terms
Drama Terminology 10: General Terms
This list of terms begins to build the dramatic terms vocabulary you will need for
successful completion of English courses. Each year in English, you will learn a few
more terms than the ones listed here in order to build both your knowledge and
vocabulary.
Please note: Terms that have been added since English 9 are marked with NT (New
Term). Government exam terms are marked with an asterisk (*).
General Terms
1. Drama* – in the most general sense, “drama” refers to any work designed to be
represented on a stage by actors. More strictly, however, a drama is a serious play
(though it may end either happily or unhappily) dealing with a problem of
importance.
3. Dramatis Personae – the list of characters in a play so the audience knows who is
who before the action begins. Provided at the beginning of the play’s script.
6. Act – a chunk of the play’s action. Shakespeare’s plays always have five acts
which are noted with a large Roman numeral.
12. Dialogue* – when two or more speakers speak to one another; the spoken
exchanges that comprise a play.
13. Dramatic irony* – when a character says something, but the audience knows
more than the character does about other characters or events, so the statement
comes across with a double meaning that the audience “gets” and the character
doesn’t. It is dramatic irony when Juliet first sees Romeo and says if she can’t
marry him, she will die, because the audience knows that by the end of the play
she does marry him, and she dies anyway. The character’s expectations and the
audience’s knowledge differ in dramatic irony. (NT)
15. Aside* – when a character says something privately to another character while
other characters are also on stage. The line(s) are meant for one character’s ears
alone. Sometimes asides are addressed to the audience.
17. Iambic Pentameter – a line of poetry which is ten syllables in length. The
syllables follow a pattern in which an unstressed syllable is followed by a stressed
one (such as the word “giraffe”), so the line of poetry bounces gently along (soft-
hard-soft-hard-soft-hard-soft-hard-soft-hard). For example, when Romeo says,
“O, she doth teach the torches to burn bright” (Romeo and Juliet, I.v.44), he is
speaking in iambic pentameter. (NT)
18. Prologue – an opening section of a longer work such as a novel or a play. The
prologue may perform a number of functions: establish and/or anticipate
character, theme, action or setting, etc. Romeo and Juliet opens with a prologue,
which is in the form of a sonnet. See your poetry terms handout for the definition
of sonnet. (NT)
19. Pun – this is a play on words in which a word or phrase can be taken to mean
more than one thing.
20. Soliloquy – when a character speaks his/her true thoughts and feelings while
alone on stage. Soliloquies reveal the character’s “real” thoughts on a subject.
22. Comedy* – any literary work, but especially a play, that commonly has a happy
ending. Modern comedies tend to be funny, while Shakespearean comedies
simply end well. Shakespearean comedy also contains items such as
misunderstandings and mistaken identity to heighten the comic effect. Often,
comedies end in marriage(s). A Midsummer Night’s Dream is a comedy.
23. Tragedy* – Aristotle defines tragedy as an imitation of a complete action “of high
importance” (trans. L. J. Potts). Tragedy is a form of drama exciting pity and/or
fear in the audience; as a result, viewers are provided with an experience of
catharsis or cleansing of emotions. Not only should a tragedy’s action be single
and complete, it should be written in poetry embellished with every kind of
artistic expression, involve persons of stature, and present a reversal of Fortune.
Romeo and Juliet (grade ten) and Macbeth (grade eleven) are tragedies. (NT)