San Dominick
The Mayflower was the name of the ship that the Pilgrims sailed on. The Ship, before the Pilgrims' Voyage, was used predominantly as a cargo ship.
the name of his ship is Chebe la Diminioz.
The name of the ship is the USS Quincy. My great uncle was on the ship and took many pictures of FDR, Churchill and Stalin, so I am 100% sure of the name of the ship. THe name of The ship is Prince of Wells. i am 200% sure
the name of the pinta ship has been lost in history
his ship was The Boat of a Conquistador
There is no conclusive evidence to suggest that Herman Melville plagiarized Amasa Delano in writing Benito Cereno. It is more likely that Melville drew upon historical accounts and his own imagination to craft the story. Both writers were inspired by the same historical event, the revolt aboard the Spanish slave ship Tryal in 1805, which Delano documented in his memoir.
Absolutely, but you have to be careful because readers usually grow attached to a protagonist. Some authors switch points of view in different chapters, which would soften the blow of losing a character, and others carry on with a new protagonist who is related to the original. In general though, if you can imagine it, you can do it. Doing it well, so that people will understand and it isn't hard to read is the challenge. :)
The question can be read either of two ways, see below:1) Can a protagonist in a story undergo some sort of transformation, either emotional or physical? -- Yes. Most stories feature protagonists who undergo some sort of transformation or growth. The events of the plot may make them realize that their original issues are not really problems. For example, if the protagonist is a girl who seeks popularity becomes popular and realizes how vacuous it makes her, she may change her point of view and decide to ditch the popularity because she "lost herself" in the process. Metamorphosis by Kafka is about a protagonist who literally becomes an insect.2) Can a story start with one protagonist, but "jump ship" and choose a different protagonist later on? -- Yes. This is not a common story technique, but it can be done. One of the more popular ways to do this is to create a protagonist who succumbs to some sort of evil and the story shifts to following the person who redeems him. A less popular way can be seen in Benito Cereno by Melville, where the story alternates between three different individuals, an American Ship-Captain, a Spanish Ship-Captain (the titular Benito Cereno), and the leader of slave revolt on the Spanish ship. Each of the three leads part of the story of which the other two are antagonists before becoming the protagonist later on.
Marisa Ship's birth name is Marisa Rose Ship.
The name of Gulliver's ship is the Antelope.
The Mayflower was the name of the ship that the Pilgrims sailed on. The Ship, before the Pilgrims' Voyage, was used predominantly as a cargo ship.
No, the ship in "The Rime of the Ancient Mariner" does not have a specific name. It is referred to simply as "the ship" or "the mariner's ship" throughout the poem.
The name of his ship is Migrator
The name of the first steam ship was Clermont
What was the name of Joshua Slocum's ship?
the name of his ship is Chebe la Diminioz.
Another name for a dismantled ship is a HULK