Writers and speakers use humor to convey truth by using humorous comparisons and examples related to the conveyed truth<span>. The truth is never simple and not everyone understands the complexity and the true meaning of it. With this constraint, writers, and speakers use a more understandable explanation. They use examples and comparisons for helping the people to understand.</span>
Beowulf tells Hrothgar that he will fight Grendel with his bare hands, as Grendel doesn't fight with weapons (it seems he can't even be killed with a blade). The only help Beowulf will get is the help of his warriors. Beowulf is aware that the lives of all his warriors are at stake, and anticipates that Grendel will eat them if they fail, but he is still eager to do this. This reveals that the leader is always the first one to fight, in front of his followers. But although he vouches for their lives, they must follow him to death, if need be.
Just like Beowulf is a leader to his warriors, Hrothgar, as a king, is the spiritual leader of the realm. Beowulf yields to him and wants to fight and even die for him, as Hrothgar represents the God's will on Earth. When the realm is physically endangered by a murderous, devilish villain, it means that the God's order on Earth is symbolically endangered, and it takes a hero to restore it.
Answer:
Smaug is a dragon and dragons are attracted to gold & stuff. Thror was told to keep his treasure hidden in case the dragon saw him. But Thror refused and so the dragon stole his gold and killed the dwarves.
Explanation:
Linking verbs link the subject to another word that renames or describes the subject.
Examples of linking verbs are: <em>be, become, seem, smell. </em>
For instance, in the sentence <em>Maria will become a doctor</em>, the subject, <em>Maria</em>, is linked to the word <em>doctor </em>which describes her.
Helping verbs are verbs which accompany the main verb and help to either form an interrogative or negative form, or they help in the formation of a tense. Examples of helping verbs are: <em>would</em>, <em>will</em>, <em>can</em>, <em>could</em>.
Action verbs are verbs which describe an action, they describe what the subject is doing, such as <em>run</em>, <em>eat</em>, <em>read</em>.
(Pronoun verbs do not exist as a category of verbs.)
<span>"...the beauty of the dream vanished, and breathless horror and disgust filled my heart."
This is the statement made directly after Victor succeeds in bringing the "monster" to life. He realizes that the possibility he had imagined, now a reality, is more than he can bear. It IS "horror" and "disgusting" now that it is alive. He has created a monster.</span>