This depends on who you ask. Some may say yes, others no.
I'd say pulling the sword out of the stone certainly qualifies.
finally trows it in the water and then there came an arm and hand above the water which caught it and shook and brandished it thrice and then vanished with the sword into the water.
In order to protect Arthur, when he was born Merlin took him away to be raised in secret by Sir Ector. Between this and pulling the sword from the stone, I really don't know.
Loyalty best identifies the symbolism of the sword in "King Arthur". The only person who can take the sword out of the stone is the person who first shows loyalty to the thrown.
In the legend, Sir Bedevere is instructed by Arthur to throw Excalibur back into the lake, but in the film "Excalibur" by John Boorman, it is Sir Percival who is told to throw the sword back.
an Adder (snake) bit one of Arthurs men, when he took out his sword and killed the snake he men of Mordreds army thought he mean to fight. :)
King Arthur's sword Excalibur was thrown back into the lake by Sir Bedivere as Arthur lay dying. Dozmary Pool on Bodmin Moor in Cornwall is supposedly the lake from which the sword came and to which it was returned.
The weight of an emerald sword and how heavy it would be would depend upon the size of the sword and the other materials which were made to use it.
Bedivere disobeys King Arthur by not throwing Excalibur into the lake after being instructed to do so, and he lies about throwing the sword when the king asks him what happened.
Kisame, his sword can strip the chacra from one hit, while zabuzas sword is just a sword
sword..
King Arthur was mortally wounded at the Last Battle. He had to be carried to the water's edge. His sword Excalibur was thrown to, and caught by, the hand of the Lady of the Lake. A barge then carried King Arthur to Avalon.