Savage and war hungry
Unrestrained and arrogant
Explanation: Apex said so
Barbaric and crazy
yes
Grendel views humans as weak and flawed creatures who are consumed by their own desires and illusions of grandeur. He sees them as limited by their mortality and self-destructive tendencies, which he finds both pitiful and frustrating.
The original Beowulf was passed down orally. However, it wqas finnaly put into writing by a christian monk. This added the christian element of supernatural forces as acts of god and references to The Bible. Because most of the story was lost in a fire, there are only a few texts remaining of Beowulf. This collaboration has been interpereted many different ways.
One reference is to the story of Cain and abel. When Cain was banished from humanity, apperently, his decendents were monsters. Such monsters included grendel, who seeked revenge on man kind for gods undoing.
There could be many answers to this question, but the story of Cain and abel is assumed because it is the only hint to the story that was not lost in the fire.
because grendel her son was born as a monster but for him to be strong he put a spell on him so he gets human features like get lean , build muscle and lost fat .
Yes--(I think. We need to read the book!!). The book is Beowulf.
he was killing everyone in herot
Yes
Savage and war-hungry
Barbaric and crazy ~ Apex
unrestrained and arrogant. Apex
I believe a term used to classify humans is homosapians
solid
Humans are in the animal kingdom, the mammal phylum, and the primate order.
Answer this question… Grendel realizes that he understands human language but humans do not accept or comprehend him. They fear one another as aliens.
1. Sapiens
you cant classify humans they are all the same .
"The Wrath of Grendel" is a retelling of the Old English epic poem Beowulf from the perspective of the monster Grendel. It explores Grendel's feelings of isolation and his deep-seated anger towards the humans who have wronged him. The story delves into themes of revenge, identity, and the nature of good and evil.
Grendel most likely returns Unferth to the king's mead hall as a way to taunt and intimidate the humans, demonstrating his power and control over them. It serves as a warning to the king and his people to not provoke Grendel further.
The genus that includes modern humans is Homo.