General W. Sherman was not a hero! He killed regular people who had nothing to do with his war, he ordered his troops to steal from families homes and didnt care of what the out come would have been. Also, while he was marching to free slaves, he also killed had slaves killed along the way. he didnt want them to die but he didnt have any choose but to leave them to die. as what was stated before, General W. Sherman was NOT a hero.
Yes, the noun 'hero' is a commonnoun, a general word for any person who is admired or idealized for courage, outstanding achievements, or noble qualities.A proper noun is the name of a specific person, place, or thing. A proper noun for the common noun hero is the name of a hero.
A suffix for the word hero is -ine, as in heroine. A heroine is the feminine version of the word hero.
No. Hero is a noun. The adjective form is heroic.(in the compound noun hero sandwich, hero is acting as a noun adjunct)
Someone who is a hero but does not wish to be acknowledged as one.Also seeThe reluctant hero is a heroic archetype described by Joseph Campbell in The Hero With a Thousand Faces: The reluctant hero is typically portrayed ...
because he is a hero
he did
General Wayne
washington
general emilio aguinaldo becomes hero because he save us from the spaniards who wants to "sakop us" IQtothemax061412
Major General Andrew Jackson was the American Hero of New Orleans.
General Thomas Sumter
General George Washington.
General Robert Lee, Ulysses S. Grant and General Pickett.
General Comte de Rochambeau was a French hero in the American Revolution.
General John J. Pershin
The Union General, William Rosecrans
"The Inspector General" by Nicolai Gogol