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| the part of a tower that holds the bells |
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| -a set of stationary bells, each producing one note of the scale |
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| quick or changeable in behavior |
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| extremely careful about details |
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| one who believes that all events are determined by fate and cannot be changed |
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| in a secretive or sneaky manner |
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| filled with anger over some meanness or injustice |
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| Complex-tendency to belittle oneself |
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| without producing the desired effect |
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| speechless or unable to express oneself |
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| ability to know immediately without reasoning |
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| a major section of a play |
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| smaller section of play that is part of an act |
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| a long speech by one actor in a play |
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| the words spoken by an actor to another actor |
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| A section of a literary work that interrupts the sequence of events and goes back in time |
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| usually printed in [brackets], (parentheses), or italics. Descriptions of how the work is to be performed or staged. (These words are not intended to be read aloud by the actors.) |
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| there is a contradiction between what a character thinks and what the audience or reader knows to be true. |
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