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- Antilabe abstract "Antilabe (from the Greek: ἀντι "mutually" or "corresponding", λαβή, "grip" or "handle") is a rhetorical technique in verse drama or closet drama, in which a single verse line of dialogue is distributed on two or more characters, voices, or entities. The verse usually maintains its metric integrity, while the line fragments spoken by the characters may or may not be complete sentences. In the layout of the text the line fragments following the first one are often indented ("dropped line") to show the unity of the verse line.These are three sentences spoken by two persons. But it is only one single line in blank verse:Peace then. No words. I'll rather kill myself.".
- Antilabe wikiPageID "17702049".
- Antilabe wikiPageLength "3932".
- Antilabe wikiPageOutDegree "25".
- Antilabe wikiPageRevisionID "660945685".
- Antilabe wikiPageWikiLink Aeschylus.
- Antilabe wikiPageWikiLink Ancient_Greek.
- Antilabe wikiPageWikiLink Blank_verse.
- Antilabe wikiPageWikiLink Category:Drama.
- Antilabe wikiPageWikiLink Category:Poetic_form.
- Antilabe wikiPageWikiLink Category:Rhetorical_techniques.
- Antilabe wikiPageWikiLink Character_(arts).
- Antilabe wikiPageWikiLink Closet_drama.
- Antilabe wikiPageWikiLink Dropped_line.
- Antilabe wikiPageWikiLink Electra_(Sophocles).
- Antilabe wikiPageWikiLink Electra_(Sophocles_play).
- Antilabe wikiPageWikiLink Euripides.
- Antilabe wikiPageWikiLink Julius_Caesar_(play).
- Antilabe wikiPageWikiLink King_John_(play).
- Antilabe wikiPageWikiLink Line_(poetry).
- Antilabe wikiPageWikiLink Metre_(poetry).
- Antilabe wikiPageWikiLink Oedipus_the_King.
- Antilabe wikiPageWikiLink Prometheus_Bound.
- Antilabe wikiPageWikiLink Renaissance.
- Antilabe wikiPageWikiLink Rhetoric.
- Antilabe wikiPageWikiLink Seneca_the_Younger.
- Antilabe wikiPageWikiLink Sophocles.
- Antilabe wikiPageWikiLink Stichomythia.
- Antilabe wikiPageWikiLink The_Life_and_Death_of_King_John.
- Antilabe wikiPageWikiLink The_Renaissance.
- Antilabe wikiPageWikiLink Tragedy.
- Antilabe wikiPageWikiLink Verse_drama_and_dramatic_verse.
- Antilabe wikiPageWikiLink William_Shakespeare.
- Antilabe wikiPageWikiLinkText "antilabe".
- Antilabe hasPhotoCollection Antilabe.
- Antilabe wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Quotation.
- Antilabe wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Reflist.
- Antilabe subject Category:Drama.
- Antilabe subject Category:Poetic_form.
- Antilabe subject Category:Rhetorical_techniques.
- Antilabe hypernym Technique.
- Antilabe type Genre.
- Antilabe type Software.
- Antilabe type Art.
- Antilabe type Genre.
- Antilabe type Humanity.
- Antilabe type Term.
- Antilabe comment "Antilabe (from the Greek: ἀντι "mutually" or "corresponding", λαβή, "grip" or "handle") is a rhetorical technique in verse drama or closet drama, in which a single verse line of dialogue is distributed on two or more characters, voices, or entities. The verse usually maintains its metric integrity, while the line fragments spoken by the characters may or may not be complete sentences.".
- Antilabe label "Antilabe".
- Antilabe sameAs Antilabe.
- Antilabe sameAs Antilabe.
- Antilabe sameAs Antilabe.
- Antilabe sameAs m.0479823.
- Antilabe sameAs Q576853.
- Antilabe sameAs Q576853.
- Antilabe wasDerivedFrom Antilabe?oldid=660945685.
- Antilabe isPrimaryTopicOf Antilabe.