From memory, Charybdis is the monster that suck up the sea then spits it back out Scylla is the monster who sits up on the cliff and grabs things with her snaky heads. (sorry if I've misspelt the names.)
Andromeda was offered to the sea monster because her family had forgotten to put an offering to Poseidon. And they had bragged that their daughter was prettier than the Nerids. So the sea god sent a monster to go terrorize the city. In order to make the monster go away, her parents where forced to sacrifice their daughter to the sea monster
A cyclops Polyphemus!
The serpant's pass.
No. Most "sea monsters" are actually giant squid or giant octopuses.
I am not smart
In Homer's "The Odyssey," the whirlpool is referenced as Charybdis, a deadly sea monster who creates a whirlpool three times a day to swallow ships. Odysseus navigates through this treacherous waterway by passing closer to Scylla, a six-headed monster, sacrificing some of his crew to save the rest. The whirlpool represents the dangers and obstacles Odysseus must overcome on his journey back home.
the name of the monster was Scylla and the whirlpool was called Charybdis, hope this helped.
Charybdis was a sea monster in Greek mythology that was in the form of a whirlpool. She was paired with Scylla, another sea-monster that sailors didn't want to encounter. "Between Scylla and Charybdis" means having to choose between two dangers, either of which brings harm.
Scylla
She creates a giant whirlpool that sucks the sea in through a wide radius. Ships will be sucked in and desroyed.
Charybdis
Charybdis was a sea monster whose enormous whirlpool threaten ships in the Strait of Messina, according to Greek mythology. The hero Odysseus had to travel through this area
That is the correct spelling of "whirlpool" (sea vortex).
She will swallow it in a giant whirlpool.
the whirlpool. the 6-headed monster was the other.
Monsters don't exsist! They cannot swallow you if they do not exsist.
Charybdis is a sea monster from Greek mythology who was believed to live in a whirlpool in the Strait of Messina, a narrow waterway between Italy and Sicily. According to the legend, she swallowed huge amounts of water three times a day, creating a deadly whirlpool that endangered passing ships.