Hey there,
Your question states: <span>Which aspect of Charybdis frightens the men more? How does the poet’s language convey this fearfulness? Well, it really all depends on what "Charybdis" is saying to the men. This would be a reason why the men would be frighten. So maybe he were to say things like there death could come to life, or things in that sort. And based on this poet's language, this would convey that anything could be fearless to anyone, it just really depends on what you say and on how you say it.
Hope this helps.</span>
Answer: Popular Sovereignty, Separation of Power, Checks and Balances, Limited Government, Federalism
I would go with john locke
B is the correct answer. The Greeks and Romans were huge on making up god and goddesses for everything. plus they were always doing human stuff in ancient mythology like getting into affairs with humans ect.
B definitely and that's coming from a person that lives in a town.