Starbuck obeys because he knows Moby-Dick's capture is worth a fortune.
Starbuck obeys because he knows Moby-Dick's capture is worth a fortune.
Starbuck obeys Ahab out of a sense of duty and respect for authority. Despite his personal beliefs and moral reservations, Starbuck recognizes the captain's authority and the importance of following orders on a whaling ship in order to maintain order and discipline among the crew.
The question itself does not make sense. The subject of the verb phrase "does obey" is missing? I'm assuming, from what the above question attempts to ask , is that someone obeys Ahab but disagrees with Ahab. Who is that "someone"?
Starbuck obeys Ahab out of duty and respect for his captain and the hierarchy on the ship. Despite disagreeing with Ahab, Starbuck follows orders to maintain order and discipline onboard the ship. Additionally, the power dynamics and structure of the whaling industry at the time dictate that crew members must adhere to the captain's commands.
The verb is merely, obey. I obey, you obey, he, she, it obeys. One may be obedient to someone, but one does not "obey to" someone.
Yes, it will obey once you get more badges. After getting all 8 badges, all Pokemon will obey regardless of level. Do note, though, that getting certain Pokemon such as Deoxys by the use of a cheating device can cause them to disobey you even if you have all 8 badges.
Obey is already a verb. For example "to obey someone or something" is an action, therefore it is a verb.
Obey is a verb. Obey means "to do as told".Example:Soldiers should obey orders.
Obey is present tense. I/We/You/They obey He/She/It obeys
Yes, even cops have to obey the law even though they have certain privileges that normal people don't have.
There is dis obey the prefix here is dis because it comes right before obey. You can use Re obey because you can obey someone another time for the same thing maybe. But everybody knows that you can use dis obey and maybe re obey Onother person: Prefixes can be dis-obey
Yes, obey the laws and obey them well.