Skip to main content

Posts

Showing posts from October, 2022

Museum Blog

I have learned a lot in the museum that us students prepared for everyone to visit. I, myself never knew that things like that still exists. It was fun to help people go to which table they'll go and tell them to not touch the things. I really had fun helping. There are 5 antiques that struck me the most out of all the antiques displayed.  First antique is the Telephone. This antique struck me a lot because I never old telephones looked like that back in the 1960s. I was really surprised on how the telephones used to be back in the days and was really amazed at the design. Our telephones in the present changed so much as time goes on. I just really like how the design is so good.  Second antique is the Flat Iron. I really didn't know that you had to put charcoals and light it up in order to iron your clothes back in the day. I thought it was just a normal iron where you just use electricity and it just heats up itself. I was really surprised with this antique and it's my pe

Summarized, Mystique of Campo

  Today's story is "Mystique of Campo: Timo, Guardian of the Putat" written by Jeanille Cogtas. Now, this story starts with a farmer accidentally hitting the Putat but is very lucky that the tee isn't damaged. Continues with the encanto getting mad and wants to take his beautiful daughter as an exchange for the damage. The farmer didn't want his daughter to get taken away because he dears her very much. He became an encanto as an exchange for his daughter and so on. The local color used in this story are dialect, social customs, mannerism, and object. "Tabi! tabi! I'm so sorry, I do not intend to harm your adobe". This phrase is counted as dialect because "tabi! tabi!" is a tagalog word for "excuse me". Dialect is the use of certain words in the dialect of the origin of the narrative adds areability and authencity to the roots of the  characters on the setting itself. "I'm so sorry" is part of a social custom because