the conversations and words spoken aloud by characters in a book, a film, or a play
The portion of the sound track that is recorded by the voice artists and spoken by the characters on the screen.
Philosophical technique used by Plato for expressing his theories. It consists in the speech between two or more persons who compare their ideas and eventually find the path of knowledge. It expresses the logic red line of his theories.
Words spoken by a character, offset with quotation marks.
process of emergent conversation in which awareness and knowledge are created between the people the involved; link-theme between mental dimension and emotional dimension
Lines spoken in a drama or fiction, by two or more characters, in conversation or discussion.
Words used by characters to express thoughts, feelings and actions.
The speeches - delivered to each other - of the characters in a play. Contrast with monologue.
is the spoken words of the characters in the story.
the lines spoken by characters in drama or fiction
a literary composition in the form of a conversation between two people; "he has read Plato's Dialogues in the original Greek"
a community conversation that can take many forms
a conversation between persons who hold differing philosophical positions
conversation of characters in fiction or drama
Conversation between two or more people that advances the action, is consistent with the character of the speakers, and serves to give relief from passages essentially descriptive or expository. See Description, Exposition, Drama
A conversation between two individuals.
When the characters in a story are speaking - usually dialogue is in quotation marks.
When the characters in a story are speaking to one another, usually denoted by quotation marks.
what the characters say in a film
The speeches of characters in a literary work (what they say).
all the words spoken by the actors during a scene.
Literary genre in which characters, usually real but sometimes imaginary, conduct a conversation, pursuing a single theme but admitting some of the digression and inconsequence found in normal conversation.
the façade of heard language that reveals the subtextual struggles going on between characters.
the words spoken by the characters in a story.
is a conversation between two or more people, particularly within a novel, play, poem, short story, or other literary work. See Katherine Govier's "The Immaculate Conception Photography Gallery" for an example of a story using dialogue. Diction
Dialogue is a conversation between two or more people, particularly within a novel, play, poem, short story, or other literary work. See Evelyn Lau's "More and More" or Matt Cohen's "Zada's Hanuukkah Legacy" for examples of essays that incorporate dialogue.
A conversation in literature. Dialogue generally refers to anything spoken by a character, even if the character is not actually speaking to anyone or having a conversation. Sometimes the term is broadened to include direct thoughts from a character.
conversation between characters
words or conversation spoken by the characters that advance the plot.
(British English) or dialog (American English): n. a conversation between two or more parties; the parts of a novel that are conversation.
Lines spoken by the characters in a play, scripted by a playwright. Be true to the script.
The speeches between characters in a film or a play.
The conversation between actors on stage.
The verbal exchanges between characters. Dialogue makes the characters seem real to the reader or audience by revealing firsthand their thoughts, responses, and emotional states. See also diction.
A dialogue is a reciprocal conversation between two or more persons. The etymological origins of the word (in Greek διά(diá,through) + λόγος(logos,word,speech) concepts like flowing-through meaning)] do not necessarily convey the way in which people have come to use the word, with some confusion between the prefix διά-(diá-,through) and the prefix δι-(di-, two) leading to the assumption that a dialogue is neccessarily beween only two parties.
Dialogue in fiction is a verbal exchange between two or more characters. If there is only one character, who is talking to himself in his mind, it is known as interior monologue.