Epilogue
Another answer:An "epilogue," by definition, is "a concluding part added to a literary work, as a novel;" thus an epilogue comes last. (A "monologue" is "a presentation by a single performer," [mono = one] without regard to placement.)
Is it possible you meant to compare "epilogue" with "prologue?" (A "prologue" is "a preliminary discourse; an introductory speech; any introductory proceeding," so it, by definition, comes first.)
In a book, the prologue usually comes before the main story, while the epilogue comes after the main story ends.
the epilogue is generally the last part of a book. It ties up loose ends or explains parts of the book that you may still have questions about. The only things that might be after an epilogue are maybe notes from the author, a glossary, or maybe a list of references.
speech or sermon
Well, I'm not sure that there is an exact antonym. Epilogue is close though. An epilogue comes at the end of a book, like the prologue comes at the beginning.
The root of the word monolog is "mono-", which means "one" or "single," and "-log," which comes from the Greek word "logos" meaning "speech" or "word." This combination creates the meaning of a speech or performance by one individual.
He and her.
Epilogue
There are 24 chapters, the first is the preface then theres 23 after that, that's without the epilogue. With it there is 25 total chapters.
yes
Good monolog sites are the ones you can see on television. The major networks have late night television shows. Each of these talk shows starts off with the hosts doing a monolog.
No a monologue is a noun because it is a thing. If it was a verb then you could say this correctly. Yesterday I monologued. This doesn't make sense. Hope I helped!
The opposite of the epilogue is the prolgue