Parodos [Πάροδος] is the term and it has a variety of meanings:
A/ It is a person who covers a distance/ travels on foot [οδοιπόρος].
Β/ Passage, pathway, trail
C/ The left entry passage of the ancient Greek theater to the scene [ορχήστρα].
D/ The first chorus ode of a performance [τραγωδία/ κωμωδία] in the ancient Greek theater
E/ The entrance of the chorus in the scene [ορχήστρα] - ancient Greek theater
F/ The sideway that leads to an avenue or highway.
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Exodos [Έξοδος] has also a variety of meanings:
A/ Exit
B/ Campaign of armed forces, expedition.
C/ The end [of a performance, of life]
D/ Result
E/ Expense
F/ The act after the last chorus part [στάσιμο] of a performance [τραγωδία/ κωμωδία] in the ancient Greek theater.
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)
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.
The entrance of the chorus and the first example of entertainment and narration are the dramatic functions of the Parados in "Antigone" by Sophocles (495 B.C.E. - 405 B.C.E.).Specifically, the parados is the way by which the chorus members and leader first appear before the audience. They make their appearance after the prologue, which involves the main character with at least one other of the play's personages. They sing and narrate background information and cultural parallels by which the audience better understands and more deeply commits to the play's unfolding drama.
Apostrophe, metaphor, personification, simile and synecdoche are examples of figurative language in "Antigone" by Sophocles (495 B.C.E. - 405 B.C.E.).Specifically, an apostrophe addresses the absent, dead or non-human as though they are alive and present, as in the chorus addressing the parados to "Beam of the sun." A metaphorcompares unlike things, such as Creon's phrasing "the vessel of our State" in the first scene. Personification gives human qualities to animals, ideas or objects, as in the chorus leader's singing of "spears athirst for blood" in the parados. Simile likens through the use of "as," "like" or "than," as in the chorus leader's singings of Polyneices' attacking "like shrill-screaming eagle" in the parados. Synedoche mentions a part in representation of the whole, as in the chorus leader's singing of the "boasts of a proud tongue" in the parados.
The parados is the opening song in "Antigone" by Sophocles (495 B.C.E. - 405 B.C.E.).Specifically, the term parados describes the chorus' first entrance onto the stage. The entrance is accompanied by dancing and singing. So the original meaning is expanded to include the chorus' first song since it is so important for setting themes to be elaborated in the course of the play.
the front wall was called a parapet the back wall was a parados
Exodos - 2007 is rated/received certificates of: Cyprus:Cat. 3
Ancient* Exodos is the final scene or ending scene in a Greek tragedy.
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)
The cast of Exodos - 1977 includes: Thodoros Sarantopoulos Sofia Spiratou
The cast of Exodos - 1976 includes: Antigoni Athanasiou Symeon Triandafyllidis
The cast of Exodos - 1989 includes: Barbette Hulshof Giannis Kalogeropoulos
king
MY life
The cast of Exodos - 1990 includes: Themis Andreadis Pavlos Orkopoulos Dimitris Tzoumakis
The cast of Exodos - 1996 includes: Giorgos Giannopoulos Dimitra Hatoupi Giorgos Tzortzis
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.