A soliloquy is a device often used in drama where a character relates his or her thoughts and feelings to him/herself without looking at the audience and to the audience without addressing any of the other characters, and is delivered often when they are alone or think they are alone.
**answer from wikipedia
soliloquy
When a character in a play is thinking aloud this is known as a soliloquy. See Shakespeare's Hamlet: "to be, or not to be..."
Juliet's speech is an example of a soliloquy, which is a literary device where a character speaks their thoughts aloud to themselves, revealing their innermost feelings and emotions to the audience. In this case, Juliet is expressing her conflicted emotions about her love for Romeo and the feud between their families.
The term used when anyone is alone on the stage and speaks is soliloquy. Macbeth has a dandy soliloquy in act 1 scene 7 when he comes onto the stage alone and says, "If it were done when 'tis done, it were well it were done quickly."
The literary term demonstrated in this scene from Macbeth is called a soliloquy. It is when a character speaks their thoughts aloud to themselves, revealing their innermost feelings and intentions to the audience.
Juliet;s speech is a soliloquy, a device often used in drama when characters speaks to themselves This is the equivalent of letting the audience know what the actor (character) is thinking.
Soliloquy?
Soliloquy
The likely word is "soliloquy" (stage term for monologue).
A soliloquy is used to dramatize a character's internal thoughts. This could function to give the audience or reader insight into the character's emotions and concepts of their current situation. A soliloquy can function to create dramatic irony (where the audience knows information that certain characters in the play do not). A soliloquy could pose a question a character has or represent some kind of internal struggle. A good example of this is the "To be, or not to be" soliloquy from Shakespeare's Hamlet (this is also one of the most famous soliloquy's).
Soliloquy: A dramatic or literary form of discourse in which a character talks to himself or herself or reveals his or her thoughts without addressing a listener.
A soliloquy.