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English
Etymology
From monologue + -ize.
Verb
monologuize (third-person singular simple present monologuizes, present participle monologuizing, simple past and past participle monologuized)
- (intransitive) To give a monologue; to soliloquize.
1870, Charles Reade, Put Yourself in His Place, page 168:He kept the ball always going, but did not monologuize, except when he was appealed to as a judge, and then did it with a mellow grace that no man can learn without Natures aid.
1976, Jagdish Chander, Narindar Singh Pradhan, Studies in American Literature: Essays in Honour of William Mulder, page 89:In The Sound and the Fury, the beautiful reality of Caddy's character might be brought home to us by that means without actually making her monologuize.
1990, The New Leader, page 16:In addition, Jarrell's one work for the stage was a version of Chekhov's The Three Sisters, a play whose three deeply frustrated women monologuize copiously.
1994, Dongho Sohn, Dilemma of Representation in Modern Theater, page 119:The stage is occupied but not in the true sense. The characters do not like to act but contemplate, or monologuize.
- (transitive) To make into a monologue.
1980, Dispositio - Issues 13-18, page 62:On the phenomenic level, of course, a dialogue can "monologuize" itself in the same way that a monologue can acquire features of "latent dialogue," etc. (see J. Mukafovsky, 1940a: 146-153);
1985, Hetty Clews, The only teller: readings in the monologue novel, page 44:At this point the thoughts of the boy are couched in the language of the boy — they are monologuized.
2016, Emily Van Buskirk, Lydia Ginzburg's Prose: Reality in Search of Literature, page 8:Here begins the essence of literary reflection, a “monologuized” view of the world (Proust), which I find probably the closest.