What is the definition
What is the word
What is the word
What is the word
What is the word
100

Pace

The speed at which someone speaks, for example, the speed of response in an argument.

100

Speaking in a high, low or natural voice.

Pitch
100

A place and time that will be interesting or familiar

Setting

100

The control of the volume and the quality of the voice so that it can be heard clearly.

Projection

100

A joke exploiting the different possible meanings of a word or the fact that there are words that sound alike but have different meanings. For example, “The pigs were a squeal (if you’ll forgive the pun)”.

Puns

200

Timing

Selecting the right moment to say a line or do an action for maximum effectiveness.

200

Follows with a relevant lesson to be learned {Something important the story is trying to tell us}

Theme

200

 A dramatic pause at a crucial moment could merit a comment.

Pause

200

 this states that one thing is something else.

Metaphor

200

 In literature this is defined as any struggle between opposing forces. Usually, the main character struggles against some other force.

Conflict

300

Volume

Describes how loud or soft the voice or sound is. (You might be commenting on audibility but you’re more likely to be discussing the effect of a loud, powerful voice or a quiet, nervous or sad voice.)

300

Includes some sort of conflict that could occur in everyday life {Usually about conflict or struggle that the main character goes through (conflict can be with another character)}

Plot

300

The pressure on individual words that makes them stand out. Emphasis or stress for a particular effect is significant and can change the meaning of a sentence as well as the feeling behind it.

Emphasis

300

giving human qualities to animals or objects.

Personification

300

A person who tells anecdotes in a skillful and amusing way; a storyteller.

Raconteur

400

Morals

 Concerned with the principles of right and wrong behavior and the goodness or badness of human character. In a fable the moral is the lesson taught by the story.

400

 Writers will sometimes use this to interrupt a line of dialogue.  It’s always written in lowercase, and it suggests that the actor should pause a moment before continuing the scene.

Beat

400

An oral interpretation of a piece of literature read in a dramatic style. A dramatic presentation of a written work in a script form. Readers read from a "script" and reading parts are divided among the readers. No memorization, costumes, blocking, or special lighting is needed. Scripts are held by the readers.

Reader’s Theater

400

The leading character or one of the major characters in a drama, novel, or other fictional text.

Protagonist

400

The rise and fall of the voice. There’s a clear movement up at the end of a sentence when we ask questions for example. Intonation also helps us to say what we mean.

Intonation

500

Fables

Fables are moral tales, often involving animals that represent people. They reveal human experiences and/or show conflicts over issues.  They are generally short and concise stories.

500

The action or process of changing from a written work, typically a novel, into a movie, television drama, or stage play.

Adaption

500

Many actors begin their interpretation of a character by finding a suitable voice. There are a number of different vocal elements you should consider: pitch, pace, pause, intonation, projection, tone, volume, accent, emphasis

Elements of Voice

500

 A person who actively opposes or is hostile to someone or something; an adversary.

Antagonist

500

 Giving human traits or attributes to animals, inanimate objects or other non-human things. An example of this would be when a dog walks, talks, and acts like a human.

Anthropomorphism