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        | a 14 line Shakespearean poem.  Usually conveys deep emotion towards a person. |  | 
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        | belief that other course of our lives is predetermined by a higher power. |  | 
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        | the driving force behind a story.  What sets the story in motion |  | 
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        | all of the different physical and personality traits of a given character |  | 
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        | character trait that leads to the downfall of the hero. |  | 
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        | What is Romeo's tragic flaw? |  | 
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        | part of a play that provides background information needed to understand the characters and the actor. |  | 
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        | Love - Juliet Lust - the nurse, Mercatio
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        | The theme of love in Romeo and Juliet is shown in 2 ways: |  | 
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        | When the audience knows more about what is about to happen then the characters do. |  | 
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        | actor says something to the audience so as to be inaudible to others on stage. |  | 
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        | when an actor delivers a monolouge all alone on the stage. -thinking out loud "To Be or Not to be"
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        | hints in a story about what is going to happen in the future. |  | 
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        | a play when the protagonist dies, which could have been prevented. |  | 
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        | moment in the play when the action reaches its apex (highpoint)      (ActIII in R & J) |  | 
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        | lesson learned or good that comes or results from the tragedy |  | 
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        | all of the action that takes place before the climax. All goes in favor of the protagonist |  | 
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        | all of the action that occurs after the climax.  All goes against the protagonist |  | 
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        | short scene near end of play when the audience believes that the tradegy may be averted. |  | 
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        | person who opposes the protagonist in a story/play - villian |  | 
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        | Who is the protagonist in Romeo and Juliet? |  | 
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        | person who the audience roots for during a story/play |  | 
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        | Who is the protagonist in Romeo and Juliet? |  | 
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        | a quality that arouses emotions (especially pity or sorrow); a style that has the power to evoke feelings. |  | 
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        | a figure of speech combining contradictory (opposite) words for descriptive purposes. |  | 
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        | giving human-like qualities to non-living things |  | 
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        | a figure of speech in which exaggeration is used for emphasis |  | 
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        | unrhymed iambic pentameter |  | 
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