hellene|hellenes in English

noun

[Hel·lene || 'heliːn]

Greek, resident of Greece

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1. 2 words related to Argive: Hellene, Greek

2. In the Bronze Age, the Hellenes had trade and cultural contacts with Egypt.

3. Acalycal acalycine acalycinous acalyculate Acalypha Acalypterae Acalyptrata Hellelt Hellen Hellene Hellenian Hellenic Hellenically Hellenicism Hellenism

4. Homer uses the term Argives, Hellenes, and Achaeans interchangeably to mean the Greek army or peoples

5. The ancient Arabians, or Arabes as they were called by the Hellenes, were a Semitic people

6. Especially in Egypt, it was intended to legitimize the privileged status of the Hellene relative to the "native" Egyptian.

7. Achaian: 1 n a member of one of four linguistic divisions of the prehistoric Greeks Synonyms: Achaean Type of: Greek , Hellene a native or inhabitant of Greece

8. Aeolus, in Greek mythology, mythical king of Magnesia in Thessaly, the son of Hellen (the eponymous ancestor of the true Greeks, or Hellenes) and father of Sisyphus (the “most crafty of men”)

9. Argive: 1 n a native or inhabitant of the city of Argos Type of: Greek , Hellene a native or inhabitant of Greece adj of or relating to the ancient Greek city of Argos or its people

10. The glossa of the Hellenes from Homer to Cavafy (Kabafi), is alive, and yet finds room for metamorphosis into Gringlish, (an amalgam of Greek and English) spoken by the same Apogeny of Ippocrates and Socrates, who migrated to the neo-cosmo.

11. Hellen, Graikos, Magnes, and Macedon were sons of Deucalion and Pyrrha, the only people who survived the Great Flood; the ethne were said to have originally been named Graikoi after the elder son but later renamed Hellenes after Hellen who was proved to be the strongest.

12. In Greek mythology, Amalthea or Amaltheia (Greek: Ἀμάλθεια) is the most-frequently mentioned foster-mother of Zeus.Her name in Greek ("tender goddess") is clearly an epithet, signifying the presence of an earlier nurturing goddess, whom the Hellenes, whose myths we know, knew to be located in Crete, where Minoans may have called her a version of "Dikte".