The hunters corner and stab the sow while she struggles. They then pour the blood into a makeshift bowl made from bamboo and offer it to the hunters as a sign of respect and celebration for the kill.
They didn't do anything with it. They just let it spill onto the ground.
After killing the sow, Jack and his boys leave the sow's head on a sharpened stick in the jungle.
At the end of chapter 1: The Sound of the Shell Jack understandably hesitated at the prospect of plunging his sheath knife into the flesh of a terrified, squealing piglet. The piglet escaped. Jack was embarrassed by his failure to kill the piglet and vowed that next time he would do it. The first presumed death was of the littlun with the mulberry coloured birth mark on his face, his death was entirely due to negligence and seemed to cause some shame and guilt on the part of the boys. Eventually Jack and his hunters hunted and killed a pig. Later still, when Jack and his hunters killed a sow, Jack 'flinked' his hunters with the sow's blood and rubbed his blood covered hands on Maurice's cheeks. All the boys simply found it amusing and exciting to kill a pig. After the death of Simon Ralph was filled with remorse. Piggy tried to lay part of the blame on Simon himself and the twins tried to pretend it had never happened. Jack however simply shrugged the episode off as something of little or no importance. Similarly, although Jack hadn't authorised the killing of Piggy, he claimed responsibility and then deliberately tried to kill Ralph. At the end of the book killing by negligence and then killing for food had evolved, via killing for excitement, through killing by mistake and killing almost casually, to deliberate premeditated hunting of Ralph with the full intention of killing him and mounting his head on a stake.
Roger pushed his spear up the sow's rectum.
Golding uses the killing of the sow to highlight the boys' descent into savagery and their loss of innocence. It symbolizes the loss of empathy and moral norms on the island, as the boys become more and more disconnected from their civilized upbringing. The act also foreshadows the violence and brutality that will continue to escalate among the boys.
Ugly open minded dreamer
The sow killing incident in "Lord of the Flies" becomes like an initiation because it marks the boys' descent into savagery and their willingness to embrace violence. Participating in the act creates a sense of belonging and camaraderie among the boys, solidifying their allegiance to the group and their newfound primal instincts.
The simple present tense for "sow" is: I sow, you sow, he/she/it sows, we sow, they sow.
The farmer wanted to teach his sow to sow.
The hunters discover strange footprints and markings on the trees that they have never seen before. As they continue exploring, they come across a hidden cave with remnants of a campfire inside. They also stumble upon a strange, unfamiliar animal carcass.
the real answer will be: sow= snowwhat is a homonym for sow?the answer is snow
Homographs for "sow" are: "sow" meaning to plant seeds in the ground "sow" meaning a female pig