σκηνή [skeenee] = scene > scenario
"Exodus" is the what the final scene is called in the play "Antigone" by ancient Greek playwright Sophocles (495 B.C.E. - 405 B.C.E.).Specifically, the English word is a loan word from the ancient Greek. In ancient Greek, the word is written "ἔξοδος." The meaning of the word translates into English as "departure, expedition, procession." The play's final scene indeed is a departing procession which will culminate in Theban King Creon's exile.
The root word of scenery is scene
The word is Latin but it has its origins in Greek theater. A Greek diety would be hoisted on stage with a mechane where a scene called for the diety to be in flight.
The only real link is that they are both old forms of French. The root words that they were originally from came from Latin and Greek. Science is Old French, and from the Latin word scientia. Scene is Middle French, and from the Greek word skene.
scene a structure in which an actor could change masks or costumes SK(APeX)
Ancient* Exodos is the final scene or ending scene in a Greek tragedy.
A skene is an old English term used commonly is the 1800's. It is devised from the greek word skaulk, witch means lather in heavenly aroma.
"Seen" is a homophone for the word "scene."
The Exodus
the greek word for egg is: avgo
The Greek word for experience is εμπειρία (empeiría).