her face ic pale,but fair. Her hair is long and dark,
Arachne was a weaver of particular skill.
Arachne's Roman name is still Arachne.
No, Athena abused her power as a god and proved Arachne's point that gods are immoral, unjust, and abusive over their power. Athena accepted Arachne's offer to see who's the best weaver. Arachne won fair and square however, Athena did not like that and cursed Arachne out of spite.
Because nobody can weave just like her.
Oh, dude, after Athena won the weaving contest against Arachne, she got a bit sassy and turned Arachne into a spider. Like, talk about a creative punishment, right? So now Arachne just weaves webs all day instead of chatting with the other goddesses. Classic Athena move.
Arachne was a weaver of particular skill.
Arachne said she was a better weaver than even Athena, and challenged her.
Arachne's Roman name is still Arachne.
No, Athena abused her power as a god and proved Arachne's point that gods are immoral, unjust, and abusive over their power. Athena accepted Arachne's offer to see who's the best weaver. Arachne won fair and square however, Athena did not like that and cursed Arachne out of spite.
Because nobody can weave just like her.
what is the answer for #1 for the story Arachne
Oh, dude, after Athena won the weaving contest against Arachne, she got a bit sassy and turned Arachne into a spider. Like, talk about a creative punishment, right? So now Arachne just weaves webs all day instead of chatting with the other goddesses. Classic Athena move.
a spider! (Hence Arachne-Arachnid)
arachne weapon was the ability to do what spiders
Arachne was a mortal weaver.
In the story of Arachne, the falling action occurs after Arachne and Athena have their weaving contest. Athena, angered by Arachne's hubris, transforms her into a spider. Arachne, now a spider, continues to weave intricate webs for eternity as a punishment from Athena.
After the weaving contest the goddess Athena slashed Arachne's face and Arachne turned into a spider. Because of this Arachne is normally depicted as a scarred weaver or a spider.