It deppends on the type of warrior but I will try to explain using the Samurai. I think with them the value of the moral is of high importance and determined their lives:
The samurai considered death as something they had to be always prepared for and thus, whenever it was needed, they would sacrifice their life "for a greater good" they knew it was something it might happen anyway. The idea of trascendence is something we have to be also aware of; They thought that what you do in this life will affect how you start the next one (reincarnation).
Let's also talk about a "negative" way of sacrifice; The seppuku, where they took their own life by cutting their stomach with a sword when they considered they didn't follow properly one of the eight most important values as we can see in any of the samurai codes or books like Hagakure or the Bushido code. these eight codes are: Justice, courage, mercy, politeness, honesty, honor, loyalty and self-control.
Not only life they would sacrifice but also money, food, social life because these things might be a distraction or a cause of desire whic leads to suffering.
The word that is used incorrectly is "diffuse" in "diffuse the situation," where the correct word to be employed would be "defuse," as explained below.
<h3>Diffuse vs. defuse</h3>
Although the verbs "diffuse" and "defuse" sound alike, their meanings are completely different. That is why the use of "diffuse" in the sentence "The queen attempts to diffuse the situation" is incorrect. Let's compare the meaning:
- To diffuse: to spread something.
- To defuse: to calm or settle something.
Taking the context into consideration, where a murder seems about to happen, it would make sense for the queen to try to calm or settle the situation - that is, to "defuse" it. It would not make any sense for her to try and spread the situation or "diffuse it".
With the information above in mind, we can conclude that the answer provided is correct.
Learn more about defuse and diffuse here:
brainly.com/question/15504864
#SPJ1
hello there!
the answers are
1.He goes hoping to meet up with Juliet.
2.He wants to be rude to them.(hahaha)
3.He is related to the Montague family.
hope this helps
thank you
BEST REGARDS QUEEN Z
<span>The specific clues that
describe the end rhyme from suggested options are: rhyme that Poe used and line
end. First option is they clue that can define the end rhyme because it was the
“only one of the rhyming devices Poe has used” and the second one because it represents
the place of the rhyme (rhyme is at the end of the line).</span>
Answer:
True. Homer uses irony in Menelaus's speaking with Helen about her history.
Explanation:
In Book 2 of "The Odyssey", Telemachus had arrived at the kingdom of Sparta and was staying with Menelaus. There, during dinner, they converse on the bravery of Odysseus and Menelaus and Helen began telling of stories about their knowledge of him. Helen expresses her praise for Odysseus and said that while she was in Troy as the wife of Paris, she had seen through the disguise of Odysseus but she did not report him to the Trojans as she misses her home and husband. This was responded by Menelaus as being "quite a tale". In this discourse between husband and wife, Homer uses irony and sarcasm.