"living sea"
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.
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.
That's what I was wondering.
In "A Tale of Two Cities" by Charles Dickens, the blue-flies referred to in Chapter 3 symbolize the oppressive and suffocating atmosphere in the decrepit prison where the protagonist, Charles Darnay, is held. They represent the decay and degradation of the prison environment, emphasizing the grim conditions faced by its inmates.
the mob demanded that charles darnay be released
the mob demanded that charles darnay be released
the mob demanded that charles darnay be released
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
English mob was very calm and only going to there own way but the mob of France was full of blood shedding and the revolutionaries killing the innocent people, as they wanted to kill the all Noble's words in the novel are differently used for English mob and for French mob from where the French mob passes it make that area as quite as desert
' A mob'
It depends on the context... mob(ile) mob(bed)..
The noun mob is a singular, common, concrete noun; a word for a large crowd of people, often disorderly and intent on causing trouble.The noun mob is also used as a collective noun, for example:a mob of deera mob of emusa mob of kangaroosa mob of meerkatsa mob of whalesa mob of wallabies
peers and prestige