the parados was at the back of the trench and was similar to the parapet as it provided shelter and absorbed the impact from exploding artillery from behind the trench preventing it from entering and injury soldiers inside the trench
A parados was the back wall of a trench and was used to provide cover for soldiers as they moved about and fought in their trenches.
the front wall was called a parapet the back wall was a parados
In ancient Greek theater, the parados was the song and dance performed by the chorus as they entered the orchestra area. It served as an introduction to the play and helped establish the mood and themes of the performance.
A parados was a song introducing the story of a play, sung by the chorus as it first entered the stage.The two side entrances to the stage (orchestra) through which the chorus entered to deliver the parados were each also called a parados (two paradoi)
Parados 😀
Stand Parados - 2013 2-10 was released on: USA: 1 February 2014
Parados is also used as an English word, it is bank of earth built behind a trench to protect soldiers from supprise attack from the rear. It origin in Europe was French and the words spelling is 'para reredos' and was used about 1825 -1835. A paradros in Greek Tragedy terminology was a conversation between a single actor and a chorus. Later a second and third actor was added so that a Parados became a gangway on which chorus and actors made their entry from either side into the orchestra. So the Parados was a gangway in Greek Tragedy and came to mean a kind of fortified trench, which is also a form of gangway
A Parados is the rear of a trench. The rear of the human big toe in the seety circustances aplied during fun time....For example in the first world war.I believe the word "parade" is derived from the Greek parados. The prologue of a Greek play is followed by the parados, the entry of the Chorus (cf. our derived term "parade"). As the members of the Chorus proceed onstage together, this is like a parade.
The first choral entrance and ode is the meaning of the word parados in "Antigone" by Sophocles (495 B.C.E. - 405 B.C.E.).Specifically, the term parados comes from the ancient Greek word πάροδος. It literally describes the first entrance of the chorus members onstage. But it also is used to refer to the first ode that the chorus sings while dancing onstage.
no they used in in ww2
Examples of parados are found in nearly every kind of play based on the Greek theater model. They only involve the actors and the chorus making their entrances on the sides of the orchestra.
The front wall is a parapet the back is a parados.