How to Use interior monologue in a Sentence
interior monologue
noun-
For the most part, though, Enzo is just a dog with an interior monologue.
— Lindsey Bahr, Detroit Free Press, 8 Aug. 2019 -
There’s no interior monologue in the film, so that struggle isn’t quite so legible in the movie.
— Jo Livingstone, The New Republic, 7 Jan. 2022 -
Ford has a gift for nimble interior monologues and a superb ear for the varieties and vagaries of human speech.
— Rand Richards Cooper, New York Times, 12 May 2020 -
We’ve been deprived of June’s interior monologue all episode.
— Rena Gross, Billboard, 16 May 2018 -
Bareilles' music — her songs often function as interior monologues and are suffused with hope — was the key factor.
— Chris Jones, chicagotribune.com, 10 July 2018 -
And so the pages of Berlin cut, sometimes abruptly, from street shots to close-ups, from train tracks to interior monologues, from newspapers to parlor rooms, and from one character to another.
— Sarah Boxer, The New York Review of Books, 7 Mar. 2019 -
Rodgers’s performance deepens the unsettling mood of Feito’s interior monologue, about a New York mom haunted by the success of her husband’s latest mystery novel.
— Marshall Heyman, Vulture, 25 Aug. 2021 -
We are invited to consider the solitude of the school lunch hour, when Charlie Brown must sit with his thoughts, literally: each of the panels below the top row features the lone figure and a speech bubble giving voice to his interior monologue.
— Nicole Rudick, The New Yorker, 6 Aug. 2019 -
White presents the story mainly through narration that reveals Brad’s interior monologues.
— Gary Thompson, Philly.com, 20 Sep. 2017 -
His verse often seems like an interior monologue on which the reader is casually eavesdropping.
— Danny Heitman, The Christian Science Monitor, 6 Apr. 2018 -
But without the benefit of interior monologues, the show can waft abstractly into incoherence.
— Sophie Gilbert, The Atlantic, 28 Oct. 2019 -
Liza’s inner story, which is also dramatized and also features her narration (her interior monologue), is far more troubled.
— Richard Brod, The New Yorker, 20 Aug. 2021 -
All those interior monologues and descriptive parsings of emotional states?
— Ty Burr, BostonGlobe.com, 15 Aug. 2019 -
Both earlier books feature the interior monologues and exterior dealings of Lerner-types.
— Jordan Kisner, The Atlantic, 10 Sep. 2019 -
In pages-long, often dialogue-heavy sections without paragraph breaks, quotation marks or full stops, Petterson shares his character’s interior monologue.
— Nina Renata Aron, Los Angeles Times, 2 Feb. 2022 -
Intriguingly, the two novels mirror each other in their structure, both being divided into four interior monologues.
— Coco Fusco, The New York Review of Books, 24 Mar. 2020 -
No one wanted an earnest, low-tech adventure story featuring a shelter dog without superpowers or some snappy interior monologues.
— Stephen Battaglio, latimes.com, 16 Dec. 2017 -
Penn Badgley returns as Joe, the stalker-murderer bookstore manager with sad eyes and a ceaselessly cynical interior monologue.
— Washington Post, 25 Dec. 2019 -
But now his personal troubles have become the focal point, interior monologues dressed up with occasional musical flourishes.
— Greg Kot, chicagotribune.com, 1 June 2018 -
Sullivan workshopped his identity and his relationships, committing to the page an interior monologue of self-discovery that paralleled the gay-liberation movement, the burgeoning transgender-rights movement, and the AIDS crisis.
— Jeremy Lybarger, The New Yorker, 16 Sep. 2019 -
The concerto became a dramatic push-pull, the orchestra launching ideas in extroverted fashion, Altstaedt refashioning them as interior monologue.
— Washington Post, 7 Feb. 2020 -
His thoughts are never directly communicated, whether by contrived narration or interior monologue.
— Nicholas Quah, Vulture, 22 June 2021 -
Both are composed of autobiographical observations presented as if in transcription of an interior monologue.
— David L. Ulin, WSJ, 19 Aug. 2022 -
Modern stories frequently plunge us into lengthy interior monologues, exhaustively describe settings and people’s physical features, delight in the random, absurd, and orthogonal, and end with deliberate ambiguity.
— Ferris Jabr, Harper's magazine, 10 Mar. 2019
Some of these examples are programmatically compiled from various online sources to illustrate current usage of the word 'interior monologue.' Any opinions expressed in the examples do not represent those of Merriam-Webster or its editors. Send us feedback about these examples.
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