I see, you see, we all Odyssey
Just like Grammar used to make
How to bury your brothers
Roman Holiday
got any...change?
100

Spends all day weaving a burial shroud, and all night unweaving it

Penelope

100

Identify the error:

These freshman don't know anything!

contraction

(informal style)

100

“I did not believe / your proclamation had such power to enable / one who will someday die to override / God’s ordinances, unwritten and secure. / They are not of today and yesterday; / they live forever.”

Antigone

100

“But Romans, don’t forget that world dominion / Is your great craft: peace, and then peaceful customs; / Sparing the conquered, striking down the haughty.”

Anchises

100

"The berries of the tree, spattered with blood, assumed the sable hue; the blood-soaked roots tinged with a purple dye the hanging fruits"

Pyramus and Thisbe

200

He comes of age as his father comes home

Telemachus

200

The students flip books were fun to look at. 

apostrophe error

200

The king of Thebes who makes a controversial edict

Creon

200

“Out of my grave let an avenger rise, / With fire and iron for Dardanian settlers— / Now—someday—when the power is there to strike. / Our shores will clash, weapons and seas collide. / My curse is war for Trojans and their children.”

Dido

200

The first age of man

Gold

300

This drunken shepherd might try to eat you (and kill your puppies!)

Polyphemus

300

He enjoys playing video games but he would rather be doing his literature homework. 

comma splice

300

Antigone's fiancé

Haemon

300

______ kills _______ and takes a swanky belt.

Turnus; Pallas

300

In the Metamorphoses, when things change, it seems to be from something higher to something lower. For example: a human changes into an animal; an animal turns to stone; a woman changes into a man.


Who is the woman that changes into a man?

Caenis

(Lapiths and the Centaurs)

400

“Keep your joy in your heart, old dame; stop, do not raise up / the cry. It is not piety to glory so over slain men.”

Odysseus

400

He is harder, faster, better, and has the strength of a thousand men. 

parallel structure (violation)

400

The blind prophet who identifies the king as the city's sickness in 2 different plays

Tiresias 

400

The two things Aeneas carries with him from burning Troy:

Anchises and his household gods

400

Name the 2 tapestry weaving ladies we read about

1) Arachne
2) Philomela

500

DOUBLE JEOPARDY

The greek word used in the invocation to describe Odysseus. It can be translated to mean: many ways, many minds, and many turnings.

500

Bright with lights and ornaments, cars drive through Christmas tree lane every December. 

dangling modifier

500

The 4 children of Oedipus

Polyneices, Eteocles, Antigone, Ismene

500

He may have been right about the Trojan horse thing, but oops, he and his sons got eaten by snakes

Laocoon

500

“He was supreme in war and peace; though not his great campaigns triumphantly concluded, nor his feats achieved at home, his glory gained so fast, made him a star, a comet new in heaven, rather his son. For nothing he achieved was greater than to sire this son of his.”

Apotheosis of Julius Caesar

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