DAEDALUS ET ĪCARUS.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Chapter 5. What is a verb infinitive? a form of a verb without person or num ber to walk to love to prepare.
Advertisements

Chapter I Parts of Speech; Nouns: Number, Gender, Case (Nominative and Accusative); First Declension Nouns.
Chapter 23 - Participles. General: When we take a verb and make an adjective out of it, we have constructed a verbal adjective or participle: The shouting.
Perfect Passive Participles
Aeneid II
CASE REVIEW.
Latin II Bellwork Supply the following personal pronoun or possessive adjective forms for the italicized/purple words. (Refer to the chart in your notes.
Latin 2 Bellwork MAP and TRANSLATE this sentence on your whiteboard:
nec rēx Plūtō nec coniūnx Prōserpina Orpheō ōrantī negāre potuērunt
Latin 2: Reread lectio 1, Cap. 10 (1st 25 lines and put on log)
We will have a test on Cap. 19 next week
PĀN ET SYRINGA.
INSERT YOUR EVENT TITLE HERE
PASSIVE VERB FORMS.
Fields and Buttons x text text text Field name / / text text search
Company Presentation Template
Human resources slide 1 HUMAN RESOURCES
Write a sentence to describe what’s going on in the picture
Introducción/Background
PȲRAMUS ET THISBĒ.
Unit I/II Power Words.
THĒSEUS IN CRĒTĀ.
ODYSSĒA.
CALLISTŌ.
CALLISTŌ.
PHOEBUS ET DAPHNĒ.
EURŌPA ET TAURUS.
PHAËTHON.
Latin vocabulary you ABSOLUTELY must know:
ĒCHŌ ET NARCISSUS.
ĒCHŌ ET NARCISSUS.
AENĒĀS IN ĪTALIĀ.
Lesson 15 Vocabulary “Coloni Romani”.
PHILĒMŌN ET BAUCIS.
BRITANNIA RŌMĀNA.
CĒYX ET ALCYONĒ.
ATALANTA ET HIPPOMENES
Lesson XLII: Plinius et Puer
Iāsōn autem sine comitibus īre nōn dēsīderābat; quam ob causam quīnquāgintā virōs fortissimōs dēlēgit inter quōs erant Orpheus et Herculēs.
SIBYLLA CŪMAEA.
THĒSEUS RĒX.
MIDĀS.
THĒSEUS ATHĒNĪS.
Latin Maxims.
MIDĀS.
CHARTA GĒOGRAPHICA: EURŌPA ET ALIAE CONTINENTĒS
Agenda diēs Martis, a.d. vii Kal. Oct. A.D. MMXVIII
Familia Romana CHAPTER 10. Bestiae Ferae  quid est bestia fera?  bestiae ferae sunt bestiae quae homines edunt.  cur pastores Africae leones timent?
Mēdēa amicītiā falsā fīliās Peliae cēpit dumque fābulam dē iuventūte Aesonis rēceptā nārrat, eīs spem dat parentem suum arte magicā revīvēscere posse.
ULIXĒS ET ĀIAX.
In Graeciā patrēs mātrēsque dōna prō fīliīs receptīs ferunt, sed abest Aesōn, quī iam mortī vīcīnus est atque dēfessus multīs annīs.
Author first name, author last name, author title
ORPHEUS ET EURYDICĒ.
Imperfect & Perfect Tenses
CIRCĒ.
CYGNUS.
Author first name, author last name, author title
Perfect Passive Interrogatives
MORS ORPHEĪ.
TRŌIA CAPTA.
`dūre Philoctētē, licet exsecrēre meumque
Human resources slide 1 HUMAN RESOURCES
PHOEBUS ET DAPHNE.
LĀTŌNA ET NIOBĒ.
Demonstrative Adjectives/Pronouns
Latin 3, Sept Bellwork: Ablative Uses Mad Minute
THĒSEUS TROEZĒNE.
PHILĒMŌN ET BAUCIS.
Introducción/Background
Participles.
Presentation transcript:

DAEDALUS ET ĪCARUS

Daedalus diū et magnopere īnsulam Crētam relinquere dēsīderābat, sed marī clausus erat. “Mīnōs, rēx Crētae,” inquit, “terrās et undās tenet, at caelum certē est apertum. Caelō ībimus.”

Pennās in ōrdine pōnit ā minimā usque ad longissimam.

Puer Īcarus, fīlius Daedalī ad patrem stat spectatque dum pater labōrat. Pennās tenet et cēram digitō mollit et lūdō suō mīrābile opus patris impedit.

”Volā inter utrumque, mare et sōlem. Mē duce, carpe viam ”Volā inter utrumque, mare et sōlem. Mē duce, carpe viam.” Praecepta volandī dat dum novās ālās umerīs puerī accommodat.

Pennīs mōtus pater in āëre volat Pennīs mōtus pater in āëre volat. Timet et respectat velut avis quae parvam avem dūcit et eam volāre docet; Daedalus ipse suās ālās movet et ālās fīliī respectat.

Hominēs in terrā – piscātor, pastor, arātor – hōs vīdērunt quī per āëra volāre poterant et hōs esse deōs crēdidērunt.

Īcarus dēsīderāvit volāre altius in caelō et audācia eum ab itinere patris dūxit. Sōl cēram mollit et pennae līberātae sunt.

Puer nūdīs bracchiīs āëra percussit Puer nūdīs bracchiīs āëra percussit. Aqua quae eum recēpit nōmen ab illō tenet.

”Īcare,” dīxit pater, ”Īcare, ubi es. Quō in locō tē quaeram ”Īcare,” dīxit pater, ”Īcare, ubi es? Quō in locō tē quaeram?” Dīcēbat cum pennās nōtās in undīs summīs spectāvit et damnāvit suās artēs.

Tum corpus cārum fīliī in sepulchrum posuit et terra ā nōmine puerī dicta est – Īcaria.

Text reprinted from Latin Via Ovid, A First Course, Second Edition, by Norma Goldman and Jacob E. Nyenhuis, copyright © 1982 Wayne State University Press, with the permission of Wayne State University Press.