Charybdis would kill all of Odysseus' men because she would suck them up in her whirlpool but, she was never given that opportunity.
As for the other monsters, the Cyclops planed on eating all of the men and saving Odysseus for last. The Sirens would have allured all of Odysseus' men to them and devoured them and Scylla would continue to grab for six more men until there were none left.
Monster is a noun. Monstrous would be the adjective.
There is no such thing as a monster but if there was yes it would be an animal. Aweird species of an animal. If you were referring to a Gila monster, then yes.
a lot. mainly Herbivores, but also Omnivores.
A Loch Ness monster. It's much larger, and can wrap itself around the great white.
as much as a monster energy would be
Athena disguised him because the men who were courting his wife would have attacked him on sight if they knew it was him. They wanted to take power and Odysseus' Return would ruin their chance.
i wouldn't
Wake him up.
I would travel to Paris!
well,if i am given the chance to be an immigrant i prefer to stay in my own country.
It means that the drop has a low chance of dropping. A 1% chance means that you, on average, would be expected to receive the drop once every 100 times you defeat the monster. Of course, this can be rather annoying when the monster in question is a boss with high health/damage.
Odysseus did not warn hiscrew about Scylla because he was afraid they would all hide under the decks and not fight the monster. He needed them to be brave, so they could escape the narrow passage between Scylla and Charybdis
Odysseus believes that not being able to see would hurt the cyclops the worst. He does not want to kill the cyclops because then nobody would be able to roll away the huge stone blocking the cave entrance. He decides that they must blind the monster.
For any given child, the chance is very close to 1/2, or 50%.
Odysseus killed the suitors with the bow that Iphitusonce had given him. He had inherited it from his father Eurytus of Oechalia, who in turn had received it from Apollo. This bow Odysseus, when going to war, would never take with him, but let it lay at home.During the contest to string the bow, the swineherd Eumaeus brings Odysseus his bow, after prompting from Odysseus, then Penelope, then Telemachus.
Only Odysseus could string his mighty bow. Telemachus would have strung the bow on his fourth try, but was stopped by Odysseus. The bow originally belonged to Iphitus of Lacedaemon, son of Eurytus. Eurytus was originally given the bow by Apollo.
knell