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English Antigone vocabulary

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Question
Answer
Dramatic Irony   When the audience knows what the characters do not  
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Situational Irony   When the opposite of what we expect to happen occurs  
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Verbal   When we say the opposite of what we mean  
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Great Dionysia   City Dionysia: annual spring festival in honor of Dionysus,when dramatic competitions were held among three poets selected by the city  
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Theater of Dionysus   performance site of drama in Athens on the south slope of the acropolis (see below) ; part of shrine to this god  
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Acropolis   "the high city"; most famous part of Athens; theater on its south slope  
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Chorus   group of 12-15 men who sing and dance during the plays. They often represent the collective community, but not necessarily the poet's thoughts .  
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stichomythia   the line-by-line debates, characteristic of Greek drama  
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Thespis   the semi-legendary founder of tragedy during the sixth century B.C.E.  
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agora   the equivalent of the town square; a marketplace; first performances of drama here  
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skênê   pronounced "skaynay"; building or tent at back of acting area; often painted for scenery  
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orchestra   the dancing area; chorus occupies this space  
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eisoidoi   "entrances" to performance space; the opposite of an eisodos is an exodos  
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ekkyklêma   a cart inside the skênê which couldbe suddenly rolled out to display the result of an event inside;e.g. the murder of Agamemnon  
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mêchanê   a crane used to lift actors above the acting area; usually actors are playing gods here, hence the phrase deus ex machina  
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agon   in general, "competition"; specifically, the debate in a drama  
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parodos   the first ode the chorus sings as it enters the orchestra  
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