Conventions 1
Conventions 2
Heroes
Literary Devices
Homer/Illiad
100

Epics follow the journeys of the a:

Hero

100

This is described as vast:

Setting
100

Heroes are this type of character in the narrative:

Protagonist

100

Two or more words that have similar sounds

Alliteration

100

This item was created by Odysseus to end the war in the Illiad

Trojan Horse

200

This type of epic has a known author and was intentionally written rather than passed down orally

literary epics

200

Elevated, lofty describe this: 

Language

200

Epic heroes belong to this social class:

Aristocracy and/or nobility

200

Jumbo Shrimp

Oxymoron

200

This war is chronicled in the Illiad

The Trojan War

300

This Latin phrase describes how epics begin "in the middle of things" with flashbacks to explain earlier events

"In Medias Res"

300

These epics were traditionally passed down through story telling

Folk

300
Are never Gods, but instead are:

Human

300

 "boom," "crash," and "sizzle"

Onomatopoeia

300

The Illiad covers a war that lasted for _ years.

10

400

Nine goddesses of the arts, sciences, music, etc.

Muse(s)
400

This formal prayer or request to a deity at the beginning of an epic asks for divine inspiration to tell the story

Invocation

400

Despite their superior abilities, epic heroes can still experience these human limitations

Pain and/or death

400

brief descriptive phrase like "wine-dark sea"

epithet

400

This woman's "face launched a thousand ships"

Helen

500

This phrase meaning "God from the machine" describes when deities intervene directly in human affairs

"Deus Ex Machina"
500

Long description and lists people, feasts, etc.

Catalogue(s)

500

 Epic heroes embody this: 

Values of their civilizations

500

long, elaborate figurative language that compares two things using like or as

Epic or Homeric Simile

500

The war in the Illiad begins due to a beauty contest between these Greek Goddesses:

Athena, Aphrodite, Hera