| Act | To take action; do something |
| Aside | A remark or passage in a play that is intended to be heard by the audience but unheard by the other characters in the play. |
| Comedy | A movie, play, or broadcast program intended to make an audience laugh. |
| Drama | A play for theater, radio or television. |
| Dialogue | Conversation between two or more people as a feature of a book, play, or movie. |
| Stage directions | Right stage, left stage, in a drama action. |
| Conventions | The material for a drama play |
| Epilogue | The writing scene play practice to rehearse |
| Figure of speech | An exaggerated figure of speech, as a simile, metephor etc. |
| Foil | Foil through a specific scene of event. |
| Lambic pentameter | Sides of all the scene play |
| Genre | The type of play |
| Monologue | Individual scene by writing. |
| Pun | The most interested part of the play. |
| scene | Different people acting in events. |
| Set | The setting of the play |
| Soliloquy | A long speech expressing the thoughts of a character alone on stage |
| Staging | The spectacle a play presents in performance, including the position of actors on stage, the scenic background, the props and costumes, and the lighting and sound effects. |
| Tragedy | A serious form of drama dealing with the downfall of a heroic or noble character |
| Tragic flaw | A weakness or limitation of character, resulting in the fall of the tragic hero. |
No Fear Shakespeare Much Ado About Nothing Act 1 Scene 1, 2, and 3 Vocabulary Words
July 18, 2019