Im sure Dionysus is. he is the god of celebration and wine. he was raised by this guy named Silenus who was always drunk from a potion called winee the fawns made him. the fawns ( also called satys ) taught Dionys how to make wine. and Dionysus taught the people.
Loki
Sparta was the Greek city-state that was most militaristic.
In Hesiod's Theogony, the most famous Greek creation myth, Eros sprang forth from the primordial Chaos together with Gaea, the Earth, and Tartarus, the underworld; according to Aristophanes' play The Birds (c. 414 BC), he burgeons forth from an egg laid by Nyx (Night) conceived with Erebus (Darkness).--from Wikipedia.org
As often as you hear her name in Greek mythology, she WAS NOT the most popular goddess, it was Hera. Athena was ONE of the famous goddess, but not the MOST popular. Out of all the Greek gods and goddesses, Zeus was the most famous.
The most famous Greek building is probably The Parthenon which is located on the Acropolis in Athens.
Greek is not the longest lasting mythology there are older civilization with older myths. Greek however is the most "famous" (i guess that would be the most appropriate word). it is the most studied
Falstaff from Henry IV
He was born and spent most of his life in a Greek colony in Asia Minor, today known as Turkey.
Melinoe most likely was a goddess who presided over the offerings given by the living to the ghosts of the dead.
The seven wonders were: *The Great Pyramid (Egyptian) *The Hanging Gardens of Babylon (Mesopotamia) *Lighthouse of Alexandria (Egyptian/Greek) *Colossus of Rhodes (Greek) *Temple of Artemis (Greek/Asia Minor) *Statue of Zeus (Greek) *Mausoleum of Mausolus (?) They were mostly Greek because they were drawn from Greek tourist guides.
The seven wonders were: *The Great Pyramid (Egyptian) *The Hanging Gardens of Babylon (Mesopotamia) *Lighthouse of Alexandria (Egyptian/Greek) *Colossus of Rhodes (Greek) *Temple of Artemis (Greek/Asia Minor) *Statue of Zeus (Greek) *Mausoleum of Mausolus (?) They were mostly Greek because they were drawn from Greek tourist guides.
Yes, hummus in Greek means chickpeas and they date back to Egypt thousands of years ago.
Like most cats, lions are pretty laid-back. They usually only bestir themselves to capture prey, or if their territory is threatened.
Greek literature is important because it laid the foundations of the western civilization today. Epics like Illiad (4th most important book in the history of mankind, Oral epic passed down for 400 years orally until it was finally written) and Odyssey (Defines Greek religion and culture).
Polaris (the north star), Cassiopeia, Ursa Major, Ursa Minor, Gemini, Orion, Taurus, Orion's Dogs, the list goes on and on..........
There were a couple of hundred Greek city-states in Asia Minor and the islands. These, along with Phoenicia and Egypt, provided most of the Persian navy. In Alexander's time they provided mercenary heavy armoured infantry to help match that of the Macedonian and Greek invaders.
In the sentence, "lay" is transitive as it has a direct object (backpack), while "laid" is intransitive as it does not have a direct object.
No they did not the gods were the most important things ever back then