Crazy
Wacco means crazy.
Ralph is described within the first couple of sentences of being fair. This means two things: he had blond hair and that he was a just person. Another characterization is when he is described as "his mouth and eyes proclaimed no devil." (Golding 10) meaning that Ralph had full control over his Id. There are more throughout the novel but these are a few.
(pg. 109) "…He pulled distastefully at his grey shirt and wondered whether he might undertake the adventure of washing it. Sitting under what seemed an unusual heat, even for this island, Ralf planned his toilet…" Toilet in this context means "the act or process of dressing or grooming oneself" which can be assumed by reading the rest of the context after this sentence.
The answer would be wizard.
It means they have blonde hair.
In this quote, William Golding is suggesting that Ralph should be mourning the loss of Simon, who represented spiritual enlightenment and innate goodness. Instead, Ralph is crying for Piggy, who symbolized rationality and order. Golding is highlighting the contrast between worldly concerns (Piggy's death) and deeper, more spiritual themes (Simon's death) in the novel "Lord of the Flies."
To be batty is to have "bats in the belfry" -- this means you're silly or crazy.
In "Lord of the Flies" by William Golding, the Lord of the Flies is a pig's head on a stick that is placed as an offering to a fictitious beast. It represents the evil and savagery within the boys on the island. The rotting head is described as grotesque and symbolic of the darker sides of human nature.
The 'evil' or 'beast' is simply the capacity within the boys, indeed within everyone, to commit acts of evil, either for pleasure, as a means to an end or simply through negligence and the desire to conform.
Golding ends Lord of the Flies like he does to overall expose us to the perspective an adult would have on the savage behavior the boys exerted. The boys ended up causing destruction, killing others, and losing all manners during this period of time. The naval officer is completely disgusted by the way they acted since being rich and intelligent British boys they were taught better. Overall he ends the book that way on account of irony.
The Lord of the flies is the head of the pig that is killed by Jack and his tribe halfway through the story. Golding refers to the way it 'summons' the flies. also, the word beezelbum means lord of the flies. It also means devil. The lord of the flies has a very religious message. Jack=satan simon=jesus
In William Golding's "Lord of the Flies," the hunters place the sow's head on a stick as an offering to the imagined "beast," which symbolizes the primal instincts and inherent savagery within the boys. This act, known as "The Lord of the Flies," serves as a powerful representation of their descent into barbarism and the loss of civilization. The grotesque trophy also acts as a means to assert power and control over their fears, reflecting their complete surrender to their more savage natures.
"Batty girl" is a slang term that can be interpreted in different ways depending on the context and region. In some cases, it may refer to a girl who is considered crazy or eccentric, while in other cases it might refer to a girl who is attractive or sexually appealing.
Roy Batty is desperate to find the means of extending his life and the life of Pris .
it means poor people can't come eg you batty boy
This means the line that seperates a pair of human bumcheeks.
To have bats in the belfry is an old expression meaning to be crazy. The belfry is part of the steeple where the church bells are. Going batty is an abbreviation of the expression, and it means "going crazy.""Bats in the belfry" and "going batty" are two different slang colloquialisms. Bats in the belfry is derived from bats domiciling in the belfry of church steeples and, being nocturnal, when the church bells ring in the morning the bats go all aflutter. Dazed, confused and unable to see, hence, "blind as a bat" they run into each other, walls, etc., giving the appearance of being irrational or crazy."Going Battie", or sometimes "Going Batty", was derived from William Battie, sometimes written Batty. He was an 18th century psychiatrist whose claim to fame was his 1758 publishing on the treatment of mental illness, A Treatise on Madness. He was the first to promote that his institutions could cure the mentally ill and his madhouses made him one of the richest men in England. Wealthy and poor alike were often drug off to his asylums for unjustified torture in the guise of treatment for the mentally ill. Victims of his inhumane practices were alleged perpetrators of crimes, the depressed, the uneducated and sometimes, geopolitical foes. His financial success fueled a boom in the asylum business and the catchphrase "going batty". If one were "going batty" they were meant to be going by the way of William Battie's treatment or going off to one of his asylums.