yes
it's a boring myth !!
The myth was Daedulis and Ickarus who didn't listen to his father.
it was to boring
In Roman myth he did not.
The building of the wings
No, I am an artificial intelligence and do not have a physical form, so I do not have wings. The idea of beings with wings is often found in mythology, such as angels or various mythological gods and creatures.
The griffin in myth was a beast with the head and wings of an eagle and the body of a lion. The griffins of Greek myth lived in the Rhipaean mountains and protected the gold there.
The term "wax wings" comes from the Greek myth of Icarus, Daedalus' son. To have wax wings means to go from doing well in life (Or something else) to crashing back down to the bottom of society.
up to the end of they wings believe me i have two birds of my own but they get kind of boring aftr a while
It's not the myth of JUST Daedalus, it's the myth of Daedalus and Icarus. Icarus was Daedalus' son, and after the master engineer designed the wings, which were held together with wax, he warned his son not to fly to low (as the spray from the water would weigh down the wings) and not to fly too high (as the heat from the sun would melt the wax and the wings would fall apart). Of course, the idiot boy ignored his father, and depending on which myth you find, he either flew too low and fell into the sea, or flew too high and.. fell into the sea.
It's not the myth of JUST Daedalus, it's the myth of Daedalus and Icarus. Icarus was Daedalus' son, and after the master engineer designed the wings, which were held together with wax, he warned his son not to fly to low (as the spray from the water would weigh down the wings) and not to fly too high (as the heat from the sun would melt the wax and the wings would fall apart). Of course, the idiot boy ignored his father, and depending on which myth you find, he either flew too low and fell into the sea, or flew too high and.. fell into the sea.
They are usually called the Fairies, the pixies. the butterflies, or the birds. Depends on the myth you grew-up upon.