This may be a trick question. The very famous first line of Chapter 1 is "Call me Ishmael." But Melville wrote two chapters that come before that--the first is called "Etymology" and the second is called "Extracts." The first word of "Etymology" is "Supplied."
delineate, is one of my favorites.
The first word of chapter 4 of Moby Dick is "Descending."
Captain Ahab was the first person to spot Moby Dick, the white whale, in the novel "Moby Dick" by Herman Melville.
The whale in "Moby Dick" gets his name from his albino appearance. The name "Moby Dick" is derived from the Arabic word "moby", which means white, and the name Dick, which was a common name for devil in the 19th century.
The first to sight Moby Dick is Captain Ahab, the captain of the Pequod. He spots the white whale from the masthead of the ship and becomes obsessed with hunting him down throughout the novel.
The title character, Moby Dick, first appears in Chapter 42 of the book "Moby Dick" by Herman Melville.
No. Moby Dick is a book.
found another orphan
Moby Dick.
Moby Dick is the antagonist.
Moby Dick is a fictional white whale in Herman Melville's novel of the same name. In the story, Moby Dick attacks the whaling ship and its crew out of vengeance for being hunted and harmed by humans. The act of eating a person in the story symbolizes the whale's power and ferocity.
The word "dismemberer" in Moby Dick refers to the character of Captain Ahab, who is described as a dismemberer of whales due to his obsession with hunting and killing the white whale, Moby Dick. Ahab's relentless pursuit of the whale symbolizes his destructive and vengeful nature.
Moby Dick is a sperm whale.