Oh, dude, Charybdis is like this mythical creature from Greek mythology. She's a whirlpool monster who sucks in water three times a day, making navigating the seas pretty tricky for sailors. So, yeah, she's basically the original water hazard on the high seas.
Charybdis: enormous and dangerous whirlpool
He plugged the sirens ears and avoided the Charybdis
The Charybdis is a giant whirlpool that lives under an enormous fig tree. It tried to suck in Odysseus's ship.
If you are asking what it is called, it would be Charybdis.
Well Odysseus was a Greek explorer and Charybdis was a seamonster that sucked ships up at the entrance to the sea of monsters - You need to ask the question more clearly.
Charybdis: enormous and dangerous whirlpool
Charybdis japonica was created in 1861.
Ethmia charybdis was created in 1973.
The Charybdis.
He never fought charybdis. He had a choice to pass by scyllia or charybdis and chose scyllia. He never had to fight them a second time
He plugged the sirens ears and avoided the Charybdis
Charybdis was one of two guardians of an ocean. Scylla was her sister, and the other guardian.
Charybdis resided in the Strait of Messina off the coast of Sicily. She, with fellow monster Scylla, would cause ships to crash. Charybdis was seen as a giant whirlpool.
Ships that go near Charybdis who is a sea monster are known to go into a huge whirlpool. Charybdis is a goddess of the tides with triple drawing expulsion.
Charybdis is a Greek sea monster who sucks in the sea and spits it back out again.
scylla
The whirlpool is often associated with the sea monster Charybdis in Greek mythology. Charybdis was a creature that created powerful whirlpools in the sea, capable of swallowing ships whole.