Wednesday, July 29, 2009

Roman Literature

“The conquered becoming the conqueror, and the conqueror becoming conquered”

QUALITIES
1. Greatly imitative of the Greek models
2. Practical rather than being imaginative and speculative
3. Predominant of satire
4. Started with history


CLASSICAL LITERATURE
First Period 
  • Early Roman Literature, with emphasis on progress and development
  • Cicero greatest orator
Second Period
  • Augustus Cesar Age, or the Golden Age of Literature (from during reign of Cesar to after his death)
  • Freedom to write resulting to more writers
Third Period
  • Age of Decline or Silver Age 
  • Less literary works

FAMOUS WRITERS OF ROME
1. Publius Vergilius Marco, also known as Virgil
  • Born in Mantua, Italy (70BC-19BC)
  • Educated in Greek and Roman Literature
  • Died in Brundisium 
  • Wrote Aeneid, 12 books, short epics of Ciris and Culex, the Eclogues, the Georgics, lydia, copa and elegies
  • Greatest poet writer in the time of Augustus’ reign
2. Marcus Tullius Cicero, also known as Cicero 
  • Roman writer, orator, and statesmen born in Aprinun, Italy on 106 BC
  • Leading figure of the Golden Age
  • Greatest orator in prose 
  • Perceived to be one of the most versatile minds of ancient Rome
  • Entered in the senate on 74 BC
  • Followed Cesar but failed
  • Wrote rhetorical treatise
3. Decimus Iunius Iuvenalis, also known as Juvenal
  • Greatest Roman satirist
4. Gaius Julius Divi Filius Caesar Octavianus Augustus
  • Roman emperor and great dictator
  • Recovered peace through series of wars
5. Quintus Horatius Flaccus, also known as Horace
  • Short and meditative poems
  • Leading roman lyric poet during the time of Augustus
  • A friend of Virgil 
  • A son of the freed-slave with experiences he wrote resulting to satirical poems and works, also cleverly combining personal reflections, observations, and delicate irony
  • Wrote odes, satires, and epistles
6. Titus Livius, also known as Livy
  • His History of Rome extended from the foundation of the city to death of Druscus and was published in 144 books
7. Publius Ovidius Naso, also known as Ovid
  • A great poetical genius
8. Titus Maccius Platus
9. Marcus Valerius Martialis 
  • Roman writer of epigram
  • Satirist
  • Orator of modern epigram
10. Lucidus LIvius Andronicus
  • Produced the first Roman Drama
  • Translated many Greek works to Latin
  • Father of Roman Drama
  • Most famous in translation of Homer’s Odyssey
11. Marcus Pacuvius
  • Greatest tragic poet of Rome

Tuesday, July 14, 2009

Subject Verb Agreement


  1.  Words in middle, or appositives, don’t affect the number of the subject.
  2. Indefinite pronouns are singular.
  3. Object of the “of-phrase” must be followed.
  4. Some” is taken plural.
  5. If correlative conjunctions were used, the closest subject will be followed.
  6. A word which normally has “s” on their base form is still singular.
  7. Subjects as a body of  knowledge is singular, but subjects as a body, quality, or characteristic is plural.
  8. There” and “Here” can be singular or plural depending on the word net to it.
  9. Collective nouns as a group are a singular and plural if it meant separately in the sentence.
  10. A work or title is singular.
  11. Measurements are singular.
  12. Relative pronouns follow the antecedents for plurality.
  13. Both “all” and “several” are taken as plurals.
  14. Adjectives are plural.