The Tale of Daedalus and Icarus: A Summary
The Tale of Daedalus and Icarus: A Summary
The Tale of Daedalus and Icarus: A Summary
Unfortunately, he angers King Minos, the ruler of the island Crete, and he
has to hightail it out of there. Desperate to flee the island, Daedalus uses
wax to build some wings for himself and his son Icarus. Daddy Daedalus
warns his son to fly at a middle height: the seawater will dampen the wings
and the sun will melt them. (Not good either way.) Icarus heeds his father's
advice for a bit, but then he gets cocky. He's having so much fun flying that
he forgets the warning and flies too close to the sun. Sure enough, his
wings melt, and Icarus plummets into the sea and drowns. Daedalus is (of
course) devastated by his son's death, but the show must go on. He flies on
to Sicily, where he mourns Icarus and builds a temple in honor of the god
Apollo.
INTENSIVE VS REFLEXIVE
● An intensive pronoun can be removed from the sentence without affecting
its meaning.
● It is usually found after a noun.
● A reflexive pronoun can't be removed the sentence because it will affect its
meaning.
● It is usually found after a verb or a preposition.
Public Speaking
– the act or process of making speeches in public
W. Mechanical Factor
– things that make your speech interesting; props, nonverbal communication,
visual aids
X. Emotional Factor
– covers how the audience feel
Y. Technical Factor
– covers things like room setup, screen placement and audibility
Plot Diagram
– Plot is the organized pattern or sequence of events that make up a story.
". Exposition
● usually occurs at the beginning of a short story
W. Falling Action
● begins to develop the conflict
X. Climax
● turning point of the story
_. Resolution
● story comes to an end, a reasonable one
Orpheus: A Summary
– Orpheus, son of Muse Calliope and Thracian prince, was gifted with an
Modals
– a type of auxiliary verb that is used to express: ability, obligation, probability,
etc.
Types of Modals
". Modals of Ability (can, could, be able to)
W. Modals of Obligation (must, have to, has to, should)
X. Modals of Probability (must, should, may, might)
Y. Modals of Willingness (will)