The speech at the end of a play is called an "epilogue." It is a final address to the audience by one of the characters or sometimes by the playwright, offering closing remarks or reflections on the events of the play.
Epilogue
Someone who studies speech is called a speech pathologist or a speech-language pathologist.
A speech by one person is called a monologue.
A formal speech is also called an oration, address, or discourse.
The term for giving a speech is called "oratory" or "public speaking."
Epilogue
Epilogue
Epilogue
It is a prologue.
resolution
A speech at the beginning of a play is called a prologue.
belive it or not its jeuism
resolution
Epilogue is the correct spelling. (A short speech performed to an audience at the end of a play; an afterword at the end of a novel)
You are referring to William Shakespeare, but it's not a play-- it's a speech from "Hamlet"-- a special kind of speech called a soliloquy (when a character steps out in front of the stage and gives a speech all by himself or herself, usually about some issue that is very important in the play).
ite added to the end of a word is called a suffix. It creates a noun.
This is called a prologue.