Monologues are self-verifying and self-referencing, a world in their own right, one with its own internal logic that strengthens with reiteration.
Sentiment: POSITIVE
With a monologue, you can be unendingly elliptical.
The writer crafts their ideal world. In my world, everyone has really long conversations or just picks apart pop culture to death and everyone talks in monologue.
Most conversations are simply monologues delivered in the presence of a witness.
Sometimes in my class I have people come in and do monologues inspired by people they know and I always find that to be useful to do specifics about somebody and then you're actually doing a character and not doing some random old lady or something.
It's a dialogue, not a monologue, and some people don't understand that. Social media is more like a telephone than a television.
I am the kind of person that wants to get up in front of crowds of strangers and perform monologues. To each their own.
My plays are made up of long monologues, which is similar to prose working with the language.
A conversation is a dialogue, not a monologue. That's why there are so few good conversations: due to scarcity, two intelligent talkers seldom meet.
One of the most unsettling things about 'Monologue' is its long silences, in which the man sits alone, staring into the middle distance, without grip of his narrative, lost to the past.
I have no inner monologue.