AP Latin Update
tibi laborandum est
This week in review
- This week we finished reading Book VI of de Bello Gallico and completed all the Latin for Theme 7!
- We took an AP style Free Response test over Theme 7. You should see grades updated next week.
- We prepared for our Performance Final that will take place on May 2nd. Check out the Performance Final folder in Content if you lost the prompts
Coin of Caesar
Parade of Romans
Aeneas is in the Elysian Fields with his father and the Sibyl :Liebeg Sets
Aeneas descends to the Underworld
Literary Device of the Week: Hyperbaton
Hyperbaton has been derived from a Greek word that means inversion in the arrangement of common words. It can be defined as a rhetorical device in which the writers play with the normal position of words, phrases and clauses in order to create differently arranged sentences, but which still suggest a similar meaning.. Hyperbaton is also known as a broader version of hypallage.
"Hyperbaton - Definition and Examples of Hyperbaton." Literary Devices. N.p., 11 Mar. 2015. Web. 30 Apr. 2017. <https://literarydevices.net/hyperbaton/>.
Ms. Campbell
Email: latinalindz@gmail.com
Website: CampbellsLatin.weebly.com
Phone: 770 867-5309
Twitter: @campbellslatin