No. The names of the days of the weeks and the names of month are different in different languages.
There Are many cultures mostly indian and eastern though
They took the idea of their gods from the Greeks, but gave them different names.
Names can be themed together by origin. For baby name advice and baby name lists from different cultures, use [http://www.babyhold.com Baby Names Meanings]
Luke and Maia.
When the werewolves are first mentioned mainly ( new moon) their names are: Sam, Jared, Paul, Embry, Jacob and Quil. Later on more join in other books.
kinda sorta. the names of the gods were different, but they basically covered the same things. the different cultures adopted different gods from different cultures. maybe you social studies teacher will be able to answer this more satisfactorily.
The Ancient Arabs, Greeks, Hindus, Romans - they all helped name the constellations. Different cultures have different names for the constellations.
Yes. They are different names for the same thing. Different cultures see different constellations in different ways and give them different names. Another name used for the Big Dipper and Ursa Major is the Plough.
Immortal werewolves, as depicted in folklore and mythology, are not real. They are fictional creatures that combine elements of vampires (immortality) and werewolves (shapeshifting into wolves). While werewolf legends exist in various cultures, they are considered mythical and not grounded in reality.
"Sextilis" in Latin. Other cultures had different names and even different months/divisions of a year/time. "Sextilis".
They are two different creatures...wovles stay wolves and werewolves ( if they were real) would stay werewolves. "…when the wolf bane blooms and the moon is shining bright."