Stichomythia
WiktionaryText

Etymology


Modern Latin, from Greek στιχομυθια (στιχος ‘line of verse’ + μυθος ‘speech’).

Noun



  1. A technique in drama or poetry, in which alternating lines, or half-lines, are given to alternating characters, voices, or entities
    • 1993: The trial in the great hall under its high vaults, dusty sunlight shafting in, full of murmurers and growlers quietened by beadles and bailiffs, with howlers in the street held back with pikes, was by way of being a play without plot or exercise in what the Senecans term stichomythia. — Anthony Burgess, A Dead Man In Deptford
 
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