Sunday, November 16, 2014

Latin Roots #6

Roots

  1. corp(or): body
  2. cred: to believe; to trust 
  3. cur(r): to run; to flow
  4. dic(t): to speak or to say
Word List

  1. benediction: the innovation of a divine blessing, as at the close of a religious service; a blessing or state of blessedness
  2. concourse: a running or flowing together; a broad public walkway or hallway; a crowd or throng
  3. concurrent: occurring at the same time; meeting or acting together
  4. corporal: related to the physical body
  5. corpulent: very stout; fleshy and obese; fat
  6. credibility: the quality of being believable or trustworthy
  7. credulity: the willingness to believe too easily without proof
  8. cursory: done in a superficial or hasty manner
  9. dictum: an authoritative saying or maxim
  10. incorporate: to form into one body or functioning unit; to combine several different things into a whole
  11. incredulous: not believing, skeptical, or doubting
  12. indicative: characteristic of or very much like; suggestive
Sentences
  1. The family felt great benediction after finding out that their daughter survived the plane crash.
  2. The young woman gets claustrophobic when in a concourse
  3. The mother and daughter found it funny that they made the same dinner for their families concurrently without knowing.
  4. The lady was relieved to find out that her symptoms were not corporal, but mental.
  5. The little girl went from a corpulent figure to a stunning young woman.
  6. My sister has great credibility because she can't tell a lie.
  7. I try not to have credulity because I have been known to fall for some crazy stories.
  8. The ladies cursory ways was the reason she had no friends.
  9. The Miranda Rights are a dictum.
  10. The boyfriend tried to incorporate all of his girlfriends likes into one present.
  11. The detective gave the suspect an incredulous look because he knew the suspect was lying.
  12. The child was indicative to his mother.

Thursday, November 13, 2014

Literature Analysis #2

The Road by Cormac McCarthy is about a man and his son's journey to the south during an apocalypse. Along this journey they encounter many troubles such as starvation, illness, and cannibalism. These things give the novel suspense which is what compelled me to keep reading the novel. Just when you think that death is upon them something happens like them finding more supplies or a good place for shelter. The reason that the father is taking his son on this journey is because he knows that in the North they wouldn't be able to survive the weather. Even though it seems as though the father won't survive anywhere. Throughout the story the father coughs blood and the author explains how he is weak. This is the biggest reveal in the end because you want the father to live, but you don't find out until the very end of the novel what becomes of the father and his son.
The main theme of the novel is you can never say for sure that you would do something until the time comes when you have to do it. I believe that it is this because throughout the novel the father contemplates about the idea of having to kill his son. He wonders if he would actually be able to do it even though he knows that it would be to save his son from the cannibals.
My connection to this book is the love that the father has for his son. I can relate to this because I have a really close relationship with my mom and my sister. We always say that it is us against the world and in the novel it really was for the father and son. The father would give his son the little food they had and sometimes take none for himself and that is how my mom is. So this is how I was able to connect to the book.

Saturday, November 8, 2014

Greek Drama Questions

  1. For dancing choruses of worshipers a goat or bull was won.
  2. Fourteen thousand spectators would gather in the open-air theater.
  3. The masks helped project the actor's voices.
  4. Antigone was suspenseful because the audience knew a lot of things that the characters in the play did not.
  5. The Shepard was to leave the infant with its legs pinned together.
  6. "What creature goes on four legs in the morning, two legs in the afternoon, and three legs in the evening?"
  7. Polyneices, Etocles, Antigone, and Ismene
  8. After Oedipus is exiled Creon takes over Thebes.
  9. Antigone tried to bury the dead body.

Thursday, November 6, 2014

Into Antigone


I’m not sure that I would do what Antigone did in this situation. I mean I would love to give my brother what he deserves, but I wouldn’t even think of the idea of burying him myself. I would secretly have something in his honor. Like in the memory of him, but not physically bury him. I’m not sure if that would be considered against the law, but if it was I would do it anyway. Especially if he was my favorite brother I guess. My ceremony in his honor would be me with maybe some candles and I would say a prayer for him. I am not sure if that would be enough considering the gods say that you have to be buried in order to move on to the afterlife. I wouldn’t do anything that would put my life at risk though because I am sure that he wouldn’t want me to die for him. Also, I doubt they would bury me, so I wouldn’t be able to move on to the afterlife either. Basically in an effort to bury my brother I would be killed and spend eternity wondering the earth because I can’t go to the afterlife. This would all be pointless because after finding out that I buried my brother the king would most likely have him unburied. Which is why I would just stick to a little ceremony in his honor all by myself if my sister is even too scared to do that.