Pegasus feels freest when he’s soaring through the sky, but he also feels terribly lonely. He’s desperate for a friend. Then Minerva unexpectedly shows up and says, “A man is coming, and he is bringing a bridle. If you help him, you will have true friendship.” Pegasus, however, is offended! He’s not some horse who wears a bridle! And yet he wants a friend. What is he willing to sacrifice for friendship? More importantly, what does it mean to have–and be–a true friend?Pegasus et Bellerophon is intended for use in Latin I or Latin II depending on the vocabulary used in your own classroom and whether it’s intended for FVR or instruction. It is about 4,200 words long. Of those 4,200 words, it has 139 total unique words. Sixteen of those unique words are clear cognates, a further eight proper nouns (like Bellerophon!), and another ten are glossed. This leaves a working vocabulary of 105 words to read this novella.
Pegasus et Bellerophon: A Latin Novella (Latin Edition)
$11.00
This Latin novella helps students practice their foreign language reading skills with a limited vocabulary story.
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