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
I know the study is called linguistics, but I don't know what the person is called.
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
belive it or not its jeuism
A speech at the beginning of a play is called a prologue.
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)
ite added to the end of a word is called a suffix. It creates a noun.
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).
This is called a prologue.