the monster Scylla has six heads so it eats 6 men of Odysseus, one for each head
4 legs i think
This animal is a lizzard, it lays eggs.
Depend upon your capabitly to not to scare upto the ammount
the Gila monsters has poison,4 legs,a strong grip,and yellow patches.
The Greek goddess Gaea was goddess of Earth and mother of many kinds of beings, from the Titan gods to the Giants, to immortal beings that could be called monsters. Echidna was one such immortal "monster", a immortal who presided over rot, slime, fetid waters, illness and disease. She gave birth to other immortal "monsters" or beasts by the immortal storm giant Typhoeus who challenged Zeus in heaven. Her children were said to be the Chimaera, the many-headed dog Orthus, the hundred-headed dragon who guarded the apples of the Hesperides, the Colchian dragon, the Sphinx, Cerberus, Scylla, Gorgon, the Lernaean Hydra, the eagle which consumed the liver of Prometheus, and of the Nemean lion. Her mother is sometimes Gaea and her father Tartarus; or the ancient sea gods Phorcys and Keto (also children of Gaea).
This is basically the Ancient Greek equivalent of being between a rock and a hard place. Charybdis was a large whirlpool, and Scylla was a many-headed monster who snatched sailors off of ships and ate them.
Odysseus is forced to put his men in danger in many situations, but specifically does so when they have to pass by Scylla, the sea monster.
6 men were eaten/killed by Scylla.
according to my English teacher scylla has 12 legs
Odysseus' crew lost six men when passing Scylla, one man for each head of Scylla.
Two
Scylla snatched 6 of Odysseus' best men as they passed, one for each of Scylla's six heads.
According to Homer's Odyssey, six of Odysseus' men were eaten alive by Scylla.
In Greek mythology, Scylla is a many-armed rock monster that eat sea travelers, while Charybdis is a whirlpool. The two represents of having just two unavoidable, almost equally negative, unpleasant, or harmful choice, or decision that must be made. It is similar to the idiomatic expression of "choosing between the devil, and the deep blue sea".
six
There are 3. (De-Vour-ered)
six