Scylla.
A six-headed monster is often referred to as a "hexapod" in a general sense, but in mythology and literature, it might not have a specific name. In Greek mythology, a well-known multi-headed creature is the Hydra, though it typically has many heads rather than a fixed number. A six-headed creature could also be creatively named or referred to in various fictional works, depending on the context.
the ultimate bakugan is a six headed version of draganoid it has 10000g!
The Cyclops (Polyphemus) ate six of Odysseus' men.Polyphemus eats two men the first time they meet at night, two in the morning for breakfast, and two more after the day's work is done.
The fist adventure of Odysseus when he left the defeated Troy with his 12 ships was the confrontation of the Cicones/ Ciconians, inhabitants of Ismara. His men looted the city but the next day he lost six men on each ship. He was fortunate enough to receive 12 jars of wine that helped him escape the Cyclops.
A brief summary of "Six Feet of the Country" would be a short explanation on the story. It is about an illegal immigrant who is killed and his families ordeal in trying to get his body back to give him a proper burial.
Scylla, she is a six headed monster who swallows a sailor for each head as a ship passes
it is charybdis .
it was a hydra they have 6 heads not nine it was a lie
cyclops devil of the deep posieden six headed monster and charybdis
The Devil and the Deep in the Odyssey refers to the Scylla and the Charybdis. The Scylla is a six headed monster who will take six of Odysseus's men. The Charybdis is a giant whirlpool that will consume and destroy Odysseus's entire ship. Odysseus decides to use the passage of Scylla and sacrifice six of his men.
1 is a cyclops, 2 is the devil of the deep, 3 is Poseidon, 4 is a six headed monster. 5 is Charybdis, 6 is Laistrygonians.
The Hydra
it is charybdis .
the monster Scylla has six heads so it eats 6 men of Odysseus, one for each head
cube,rectangle, and a six headed monster
The Cicons killed six men on each of Odysseus' ships.Later, when Odysseus has only one ship left, Scylla kills 6 of Odysseus' best men, one for each of her heads.
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.