[
UK
/ˈɛpɪlˌɒɡ/
]
[ US /ˈɛpəˌɫɔɡ/ ]
[ US /ˈɛpəˌɫɔɡ/ ]
NOUN
- a short speech (often in verse) addressed directly to the audience by an actor at the end of a play
-
a short passage added at the end of a literary work
the epilogue told what eventually happened to the main characters
How To Use epilogue In A Sentence
- Other than a few mumbly scenes between Hanks and Hoffman where the dialog was difficult to understand, I thought it was a decent movie, with a few downright funny bits, and a somber epilog. The end is near : Bev Vincent
- That certainly fits the prologue and epilogue. Times, Sunday Times
- In the "postmortem" - an epilogue that follows each episode-to episode 3 of season 3, Adolf Hitler is shown planning to use werewolves as a last line of defense for his crumbling regime. World Socialist Web Site
- The narrative is structured in nine sections, and framed by a prologue and epilogue. The Times Literary Supplement
- The story or a part of it is told by a fellow-seaman of Columbus, who had turned "eremite" in his old age, and though the narrative itself is in heroic verse, the prologue and epilogue, as they may be termed, are in The Works of Lord Byron. Vol. 3
- The cutter I used to make the owl is an Epilog Zing, which goes for around $8000. Laser-Cut Earbud Owl Keeps Your Cords Tangle-Free | Lifehacker Australia
- Well, I've got seven more chapters and an epilogue to write.
- The film's final half-hour is a curiosity, and not a successful one - a prolonged, needless epilogue which force-feeds us a catharsis that feels as false as it is extraneous to an otherwise fine story.
- Yet Cadfael continued immobile and detachedly interested, invisible against the dark bulk of the timber buildings, as if he expected some kind of epilogue to round off the night's entertainment. His Disposition
- Be sure to stick around for the epilogue to this episode.