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English
Etymology
First attested in c. 1550. Borrowed from Middle French monologue, modeled on dialogue, ultimately from Byzantine Greek μονόλογος (monólogos, “soliloquy, monologue”).
Pronunciation
Noun
monologue (plural monologues)
- (drama, authorship) A long speech by one person in a play; sometimes a soliloquy; other times spoken to other characters.
- (comedy) A long series of comic stories and jokes as an entertainment.
- A long, uninterrupted utterance that monopolizes a conversation.
Synonyms
Antonyms
- (antonym(s) of “a monopolizing utterance”): dialogue
Derived terms
Translations
drama: long speech by one person
- Afrikaans: alleenspraak (af), monoloog
- Albanian: monolog (sq) m
- Arabic: مُونُولُوج m (mūnūlūg), حَدِيث النَّفْس m (ḥadīṯ an-nafs)
- Armenian: մենախոսություն (hy) (menaxosutʻyun), մոնոլոգ (hy) (monolog)
- Bashkir: монолог (monolog)
- Belarusian: манало́г m (manalóh), маналёг m (manaljóh)
- Bulgarian: моноло́г (bg) m (monológ)
- Catalan: monòleg m
- Chinese:
- Mandarin: 獨白 / 独白 (zh) (dúbái)
- Czech: monolog (cs) m
- Danish: monolog c
- Dutch: monoloog (nl) m, alleenspraak (nl) f
- Estonian: monoloog
- Finnish: monologi (fi), yksinpuhelu
- French: monologue (fr) m
- Galician: monólogo m
- Georgian: მონოლოგი (monologi)
- German: Monolog (de) m, Selbstgespräch (de) n
- Greek: μονόλογος (el) m (monólogos)
- Hebrew: מוֹנוֹלוֹג (he) m (monológ)
- Hindi: एकालाप m (ekālāp), आत्मभाषण m (ātmabhāṣaṇ)
- Hungarian: monológ (hu)
- Indonesian: monolog (id), swacakap
- Italian: monologo (it) m
- Japanese: 独白 (ja) (どくはく, dokuhaku), 独話 (どくわ, dokuwa), モノローグ (ja) (monorōgu)
- Kazakh: монолог (monolog)
- Korean: 독백(獨白) (ko) (dokbaek), 모놀로그 (monollogeu)
- Kyrgyz: монолог (monolog)
- Latvian: monologs m
- Lithuanian: monologas (lt) m
- Macedonian: монолог m (monolog)
- Maori: kupu whaiaroaro, whaikī tōtahi
- Norwegian:
- Bokmål: monolog m
- Nynorsk: monolog m
- Persian: تکگویی (fa) (tak-gui), مونولوگ (monolôg)
- Polish: monolog (pl) m
- Portuguese: monólogo (pt) m
- Romanian: monolog (ro) n
- Russian: моноло́г (ru) m (monológ)
- Serbo-Croatian:
- Cyrillic: моно̀лог m
- Roman: monòlog (sh) m
- Slovak: monológ m
- Slovene: samogovor m, monolog m
- Spanish: monólogo (es) m
- Swedish: monolog (sv) c
- Tagalog: sariusap
- Thai: บทพูดเดี่ยว
- Turkish: monolog (tr)
- Ukrainian: моноло́г m (monolóh)
- Vietnamese: độc ngữ (獨語)
- Yiddish: מאָנאָלאָג m (monolog)
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comedy: long series of stories and jokes
Translations to be checked
See also
Verb
monologue (third-person singular simple present monologues, present participle monologuing, simple past and past participle monologued)
- To deliver a monologue.
1989, Oliver Sacks, Seeing Voices:Powerful parents, in her formulation, feeling themselves autonomous and powerful, give autonomy and power to their children; powerless ones, feeling themselves passive and controlled, in turn exert an excessive control on their children, and monologue at them, instead of having a dialogue with them.
Synonyms
Derived terms
Translations
French
Etymology
Modeled on dialogue, from Middle French monologue, from Byzantine Greek μονόλογος (monólogos).
Pronunciation
Noun
monologue m (plural monologues)
- monologue
Descendants
Verb
monologue
- inflection of monologuer:
- first/third-person singular present indicative/subjunctive
- second-person singular imperative
Further reading
Middle French
Etymology
From Byzantine Greek μονόλογος (monólogos).
Noun
monologue m (plural monologues)
- soliloquy; monologue
Descendants
Portuguese
Verb
monologue
- inflection of monologar:
- first/third-person singular present subjunctive
- third-person singular imperative
Spanish
Verb
monologue
- inflection of monologar:
- first/third-person singular present subjunctive
- third-person singular imperative