In End of Watch, their dialog is spiced with a seemingly endless stream of “bros” and “dudes.”
The dialog or monolog should also be adapted to the ages of the pupils who are to do the acting.
dialog′ic, dialogist′ic, -al (-loj-), in the form of a dialogue.
Everything had become quite still all around during this dialog.
But this dialog is soon interrupted by one of the loveliest scenes in the opera.
Note that the word 'Turrk' as seen in Irish dialog has been retained as dialect.
Of the dialog Plato was practically, if not actually, the originator, and the form has survived to our day.
dialog denotes ordinarily an artificial or imaginary conversation, generally of two persons, but sometimes of more.
With minor variations in the dialog, and with longer and more frequent silences, it almost followed the Wednesday night script.
However, that is a matter of no consequence, as we are both familiar with the dialog—, or rather the service.
see dialogue.
early 13c., "literary work consisting of a conversation between two or more persons," from Old French dialoge, from Latin dialogus, from Greek dialogos "conversation, dialogue," related to dialogesthai "converse," from dia- "across" (see dia-) + legein "speak" (see lecture (n.)).
Sense broadened to "a conversation" c.1400. Mistaken belief that it can only mean "conversation between two persons" is from confusion of dia- and di- (1). A word for "conversation between two persons" is the hybrid duologue (1864).