Jump to content

Sophocles

Nyyai Wikipedia

Sophocles (/ˈsɒfəkliːz/;[1] Ancient Greek: Σοφοκλῆς, pronounced [so.pʰo.klɛ̂ːs], Sophoklễs; c. Cci nyaai bṵ nswak ākumbvuyring bu̱ a̱tuyring 497/cci nyaai bu̱ nswak a̱kumbvuyring bu̱ a̱kutat 496 – cci nyaai bṵ a̱kutat 406/cci nyaai bu̱ a̱pfwon 405 BC)[2]. A̰ yin yet a̱kukkwo a̱ntyok du̱jem Greek ṵ ba yin bvwo bu̱ ba̱nyet ba̱hwa ba̱yaan ba ba̱ yin bvwo ni ba kan wruk bu̱ a̱mbvwo a̱hwa. Ka̱tsu̱tsrang npfwong du̱jem nu ka a̱ yin wruk cu̱crak bu̱ ba̱nyyi Aeschylus ma a̱ wwon ba̱n yyi ba a̱ ba ndung bu̱ ba̱nyyi Euripides. Sophocles a̱ yin jem a̱mbvwo na a̱ rau 120,[3] ma bu a̱tu̱yring a̱mi an sshi ba̱cucrak yya ji ba yin ba jem ni: Ajax, Antigone, Women of Trachis, Oedipus Rex, Electra, Philoctetes, and Oedipus at Colonus. [4] Ku yin sook a̱ryya nswak npfwon 50, Sophocles ba̱du̱yin nu a̱ yin yet a̱ntyok du̱jem u̱ ba yin hywong i nyyai u̱ ka̱zzu ya ma nan yyi a̱gba̱dang ka̱nkrang Athens, nji ba ru n yya ka̱ram du̱yywa kok ntong a̱n yyi Lenaea bu̱ Dionysia. A̱ yin yya ma̱nan ji nkrang 30, wwon a̱ ya 24, da nu a̱ kyrek a̱ syak ka̱rak a̱nba̱hwa ba. Aeschylus a̱ ya nkrang ka 13 ka̱ram ka̱yaan Sophocles a̱mi a̱ ru ku syak; Euripides a̱ ya nkrang ka̱naai.[5]