OK thanks for clearing that up. Is there an special term for when you have to leave the anchor behind?Nope, weighing anchor is raising it off the sea floor. Dropping anchor is, well, dropping it. Anchors aweigh is reporting to the officer/captain that the anchor has been raised and the ship is now officially under way (Even if its not moving, as long as its not still tied up to anything).
It's aweigh. The US Navy spells it anchors aweigh. It's even in their song.
Thats "cut the anchor" and is related to the phrase "cut and run". Obviously thats become a perjorative term in other services, but in naval parlance it means cut (the anchor cable/chain) and run (before the wind/get underway immediately (without the delay of raising the anchorOK thanks for clearing that up. Is there an special term for when you have to leave the anchor behind?
This isn't correct. The protagonist in Die Hard is John McClane. As Varia said, the protagonist in a story is simply the main character.Not a jimmie rustle, but just to high light another commonly mis-used / mis-understood phrase, is when people refer to the main character or 'the good guy' in a film as the protagonist.
Because the true use of the term is that the protagonist in a film is the character who is causing events/things to happen. The other guy is the Antagonist is the one who is trying to stop the protagonist, or the events that he's causing.
So quite often, it's the bad guy who is the protagonist. eg: Die Hard, Hans Gruber is the one who leads a bunch of heavily armed men, who take numerous hostages, kill people and crack the safe, all a big plan to steal a huge amount of money. < Oh shit Spoilers, sorry >
And in Die Hard it is John McClain who is trying to stop Hans and his men doing all the stuff listed above. He is actually the Antagonist.
/ end Sheldon mode.
Surprisingly, I don't think I've ever had someone respond to an either/or question with no. It's always yes or some other invalid answer, but never no.