Comedy plays of Shakespeare have a happy ending while tragedies, the hero of the play will end up brokend or defeted mentally or physicaly
Shakespeare's comedies have happy and or funny endings, were as tragedies usually have sad endings, such as someone dieing or to lovers being pulled apart.
Tragedies end in funerals; comedies end in weddings.
Comedies are funny; tragedies are sad. In tragedies, things for the protagonist go from bad to worse from the end. In comedy, everything ends up well at the ending.
Hamlet, Henry V, Julius Caesar, and Measure for Measure are all in this period. Twelfth Night is as well. It was the era of the great tragedies, like Hamlet and Othello, of the last of the golden comedies, like Twelfth Night and As You Like It, and the beginning of the darker comedies like Troilus and Cressida and Measure for Measure.
No.
Shakespeare wrote most of his tragedies between 1599 and 1608. Only Titus Andronicus and Romeo and Juliet were not written in this period. Even the plays placed with the comedies which he wrote in this period were darker: Troilus and Cressida, Measure for Measure and All's Well that Ends Well.
The ToneThe main difference between Shakepearean comedy and Shakespearean tragedy is the tone. The comedy is designed to be funny, while the tragedy will be sad... that is the main difference, and one that you can predict before even reading them. The difference is that a comedy has a light romantic spot to it while usually the tragedies have killing and despair. People laugh in a comedy and people cry in a tragedy. Well, a comedy is supposed to make people laugh. A tragedy often makes people cry. The EndingA Shakespearean comedy, by definition, is one of Shakespeare's stories with a happy ending. The difference between that and a tragedy is that tragedies always have a sad ending. The use of actual jokes and comedy didn't play a part in creating either genre, because it, especially innuendo, was used in both types. The simple answer is that in a tragedy they die at the end, in a comedy they get married. The comedies end happily, usually with everybody getting married. The tragedies end sadly, usually with everybody getting dead. A comedy has a happy ending. A tragedy has a sad ending. The comedy ends happily but the tragedy always ends in death. Traditionally a comedy will end in a wedding and a tragedy with the death of a main character. In the comedies a whole lot of people get married at the end. In the tragedies a whole lot of people die at the end. One ends with a smile; one ends in tears. The PlotComedy leads towards resolution and tragedy leads towards devastation. There can be funny parts in a tragedy and sad parts in a comedy.
In comedies everyone gets married; in tragedies everyone dies.
Comedies are funny; tragedies are sad. In tragedies, things for the protagonist go from bad to worse from the end. In comedy, everything ends up well at the ending.
Hamlet, Henry V, Julius Caesar, and Measure for Measure are all in this period. Twelfth Night is as well. It was the era of the great tragedies, like Hamlet and Othello, of the last of the golden comedies, like Twelfth Night and As You Like It, and the beginning of the darker comedies like Troilus and Cressida and Measure for Measure.
The biggest difference between tragedy and comedy is that comedy makes you laugh where tragedy does not. Tragedy is something bad that happens so one will feel sad and upset when they experience a tragedy.
The Greek heroes in Elizabethan tragedies were from the historical era. In the Greek tragedies they were from the pre-historical era.
FX is mostly dramas (although it airs some comedies) and FXX is mostly comedies.
Type your answerC.Elizabethan heroes were not always of noble birth.here...
Falling action is when the climax has been reached and the problem or conflict has been solved. denouement is what happens at the very end of the play that ties up the loose ends and answers any remaining questions. This is also known as a resolution, but denouement is associated with tragedies and resolution is associated with comedies.
It is widely believed that drama originated in the ancient Greek times. Drama itself was practised during festivals, usually by showing tragedies and allowing the audience to pick their favourite one, and interjecting comedies in between.
No.
Shakespeare wrote most of his tragedies between 1599 and 1608. Only Titus Andronicus and Romeo and Juliet were not written in this period. Even the plays placed with the comedies which he wrote in this period were darker: Troilus and Cressida, Measure for Measure and All's Well that Ends Well.
The ToneThe main difference between Shakepearean comedy and Shakespearean tragedy is the tone. The comedy is designed to be funny, while the tragedy will be sad... that is the main difference, and one that you can predict before even reading them. The difference is that a comedy has a light romantic spot to it while usually the tragedies have killing and despair. People laugh in a comedy and people cry in a tragedy. Well, a comedy is supposed to make people laugh. A tragedy often makes people cry. The EndingA Shakespearean comedy, by definition, is one of Shakespeare's stories with a happy ending. The difference between that and a tragedy is that tragedies always have a sad ending. The use of actual jokes and comedy didn't play a part in creating either genre, because it, especially innuendo, was used in both types. The simple answer is that in a tragedy they die at the end, in a comedy they get married. The comedies end happily, usually with everybody getting married. The tragedies end sadly, usually with everybody getting dead. A comedy has a happy ending. A tragedy has a sad ending. The comedy ends happily but the tragedy always ends in death. Traditionally a comedy will end in a wedding and a tragedy with the death of a main character. In the comedies a whole lot of people get married at the end. In the tragedies a whole lot of people die at the end. One ends with a smile; one ends in tears. The PlotComedy leads towards resolution and tragedy leads towards devastation. There can be funny parts in a tragedy and sad parts in a comedy.