Answer:
Fantasy/Mythical creatures
Explanation:
<em>C) It's similar to 5he style used by manu European poets</em>
Hope this helped you- have a good day bro cya)
Answer:
90% of people marry there 7th grade love. since u have read this, u will be told good news tonight. if u don't pass this on nine comments your worst week starts now this isn't fake. apparently if u copy and paste this on ten comments in the next ten minutes you will have the best day of your life tomorrow. you will either get kissed or asked out in the next 53 minutes someone will say i love you
Explanation:
do it pls it really works
Answer:
C.
Explanation:
The summary provided in the question of the given passage can be considered weak because it does not cover the main idea of the passage. The summary mentions only one detail from the passage, which makes the summary weak.
A summary is a short description of something that covers all the main point. But in the given summary, only one detail is given, and only supporting detail. The given summary does not cover the main points of the passage.
Therefore, option C is correct.
I have to say his beheading of Medusa. (Of course, Clash of the Titans is about pretty much the same thing). Not only does the myth include multiple stages of the quest, it has everything a good movie needs: action, a driven hero, and even a romance. First, Hermes and Athena lead Perseus to the Graeae, who were old women with only one tooth and one eye between the three of them, which they shared; they were also the sisters of the Gorgons (ie. Medusa), so they didn't want to help Perseus find them. Perseus took those from them to force them to tell him where the Nymphs were (they held the items he needed in order to kill Medusa). The Nymphs gave Perseus winged sandals, a special shoulder bag, and Hades' helmet to make him invisible. After Perseus beheaded Medusa with a sickle given to him by Hermes and Athena's assistance with a shield-mirror, two creatures were born from her neck: Pegasus and a giant named Chrysaor. Perseus then headed back home to give Medusa's head to the king, as he had promised. On his way back, he met Andromeda in Ethiopia, fell in love with her, slew a monster, and then married her. The myth ends with Perseus turning the king to whom he had promised Medusa's head into stone because the king had raped his mother, Danae, and forced her to flee into a temple.