Amphinomous. Odysseus, disguised as a beggar, warns Amphinomous that although he is a well-respected man and a considerable person, if he does not leave the house, he will be killed by Odysseus when he returns home.
Amphinomous feels a dark forboding, but does not return to his home. Instead he stays, and is eventually killed by Telemachus with a thrown spear.
Phemius, the singer, and Medon, the herald.
Eurymachus attempts to reason with Odysseus after Antinous is killed and Odysseus reveals himself.When Odysseus is a beggar:Antinous attempts to reason with Odysseus when Odysseus is begging for food from him.Eurymachus attempts to reason with Odysseus, even offering him a permanent job at his estate. Odysseus rebukes Eurymachus and refuses the offer.
No, he wants the honor of his father, both he and Penelope want the suitors gone and Odysseus back
Odysseus does not kill the cyclops when he has the chance because if he does he and his men will perish to considering the cyclops is the only one strong enough to move the slab of rock covering the doorway to the cave.
On Odysseus's return, disguised as an old beggar, he finds that Penelope has remained faithful. She has devised tricks to delay her suitors, one of which is to pretend to be weaving a burial shroud for Odysseus's elderly father Laertes and claiming that she will choose a suitor when she has finished.
Antinous is the leading suitor killed by Odysseus.
Antinous is the first suitor Odysseus kills.
Odysseus
Leodes
So they wont betray them.
Penelope questions the beggar(Odysseus) and summons him
Phemius, the singer, and Medon, the herald.
Another suitor has arrived, dear.
he didnt want the suitor to know it was him,beacuse they would try to kill him
No; the test of stringing Odysseus bow and shooting a arrow was Odysseus's own idea.
In Homer's "The Odyssey," the suitor who acts as a bully towards Odysseus when he returns home is Antinous. Antinous is one of the leading suitors competing for Penelope's hand in marriage while Odysseus is away. He is depicted as arrogant, disrespectful, and cruel towards Odysseus and Telemachus.
The leader of the suitors is Antinous, an arrogant dirtbag who plots to have Telemachus (Odysseus's son) killed. the next highest-up suitor is Eurymachus, a devious and manipulative suitor. The only "good" suitor is Amphinomus, as he stands up for Odysseus and actually seeks Penelope's hand in marriage, not just the kindgom's riches. They all are killed rather spectacularly.