Theseus did so at the advice of Ariadne, who fell in love with him, and gave him a magic ball of twine he tied one end to the entrance and then followed it as it unwound and led to the center of the Labyrinth where the Minotaur lurked.
The labyrinth is not a portal but a maze.
The maze (or labyrinth) was designed by Daedalus father of Icarus. It was built under the palace of Knossos ( pronounced 'cnossus') on the island of Crete.
No but it did have a Minotaur in its center. P.s.a labyrinth is different from a maze as a labyrinth doesn't have any intersections.
The labyrinth is not a person it is a thing, a maze. It has no authority. The person that owned the labyrinth was King Minos. He was the guy with the authority over the labyrinth.
Theseus was able to navigate the labyrinth thanks to the help of Ariadne, the daughter of King Minos. She provided him with a ball of thread, which he unraveled as he entered the maze. After defeating the Minotaur, Theseus followed the thread back to the entrance, allowing him to escape the labyrinth successfully.
The mall was a labyrinth- trying to get through the maze of people was a real challenge.
A maze of passageways is called a labyrinth.
The labyrinth is not a portal but a maze.
The maze (or labyrinth) was designed by Daedalus father of Icarus. It was built under the palace of Knossos ( pronounced 'cnossus') on the island of Crete.
The labyrinth.
Labyrinth
maize is cereal maze is labyrinth
the maze is called the labyrinth
Labyrinth.
No but it did have a Minotaur in its center. P.s.a labyrinth is different from a maze as a labyrinth doesn't have any intersections.
No, labyrinth is not an adverb. Since a labyrinth is a 'thing'. (maze) It is a noun. (person, place, or thing)
basically yes, though a labyrinth is usually larger.