That's what I was wondering.
Dickens describes the mob as a "wild beast" in "A Tale of Two Cities," emphasizing their power, unpredictability, and feral nature. This metaphor highlights the danger and chaos posed by the unruly masses during the French Revolution.
Charles Dickens describes the mob as a "mighty monster" in his novel "A Tale of Two Cities." This metaphor emphasizes the collective power and destructive force of the angry crowd as it seeks revenge and justice during the French Revolution.
I would guess Executioners in Revolutionary France in ( Tale of Two Cities).
eat my balls
they felt good
I really don't know
they did not like it
Often the fact that those in a crowd feel anonymous is what turns a crowd into a mob. They often feel that no one will point them out and notice what they are doing when there is a crowd.
The collective noun 'mob' is used for:a mob of cowsa mob of deera mob of emusa mob of kangaroosa mob of meerkatsa mob of peoplea mob of sheepa mob of Texansa mob of wallabiesa mob of whalesa mob of wombatsMob has been used as a collective noun for: a crowd of unruly peoplekangaroossheepcattle (when being driven in a group)whales
' A mob'
The poor and orphaned, the disenfranchised, the beaten and hungry, the homeless, and the prostitutes; these were the people Charles Dickens pitied and tried to help, through his writings and his active charitable works.
It depends on the context... mob(ile) mob(bed)..