Montresor is considered an unreliable character in Edgar Allan Poe's short story "The Cask of Amontillado." He deceives and manipulates his victim, Fortunato, leading him into a trap under false pretenses. Montresor's narration of events is biased and serves his own vengeful motives, making him an untrustworthy narrator.
Montresor's actions in "The Cask of Amontillado" suggest that he is both sane and unreliable. His meticulous planning and manipulation of Fortunato demonstrate his sanity, but his vengeful and deceitful nature makes him an unreliable narrator. While Montresor's actions may be seen as justified from his perspective of seeking revenge, his malicious intent to murder Fortunato over a slight makes him morally questionable.
The minor character in "The Cask of Amontillado" is Fortunato, a man who is ultimately lured by the main character, Montresor, to his death. Fortunato is depicted as arrogant and naive, making him an easy target for Montresor's revenge plot.
unreliable sources show nothing close to many reliable sources
UNRELIABLE
The opposite is "unreliable."
No TCP a reliable protocol whereas UDP is unreliable.
No it is very unreliable.
The word reliable does not have a prefix but it does, however, have a suffix and the suffix is -able.
There not unreliable BMW is the most reliable then VW,Audi then mercedes and the only one thats unreliable is OPEL
Unreliable
Hyundai's sliding doors are not as unreliable as claimed; many are pretty durable and reliable.
Montresor is the protagonist, because he is the main character and narrator, even though he is an evil minded, perhaps demented, person who murders Fortunato. Normally the protagonist is both the main character AND the hero of the story. Although Montresor is the main character, he certainly is no hero for planning and carrying out a murder.