soliloquize

IPA: sʌɫˈɪɫʌkwaɪz

verb

  • (intransitive, drama) Of a character: to perform a soliloquy, to talk to oneself.
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Examples of "soliloquize" in Sentences

  • I join the shadows on the wall / To watch with weary silver eyes / Poets who soliloquize …
  • But at a rally people don't just get to soliloquize like that without prior permission or prior tacit permission.
  • He tried to soliloquize, to be facetious, to have his last grim laugh at life, but his lips made only incoherent sounds.
  • The novelcame to me this way–as if told by the various Wongs at a very long family therapy session, only without the therapist, and with license, it seems, to soliloquize.
  • The warrior Coriolanus is perhaps the most opaque of Shakespeare's tragic heroes, rarely pausing to soliloquize or reveal the motives behind his prideful isolation from Roman society.
  • This excites me; not only for the potential insights it will bring to dark matter; not only for the wealth of new jokes Sheldon will inevitably soliloquize about on the “Big Bang Theory.”
  • It was daring of Mr. Holroyd to take on a major writer, and for all his forcing of themes, the book thrives on sheer wit and, most important, on welcome asides, when he steps forward like a Shakespearean character to soliloquize about his modus operandi.
  • She had, therefore, no sooner formed the hasty conclusion, that the individual in question belonged to this obnoxious class, than she resumed her former occupation, and continued to soliloquize and apostrophize her absent handmaidens, without even appearing sensible of his presence.

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