Cytherea
Phosphorus.
There were many famous ancient astronomers, and astronomers from hundreds of years ago (not exactly ancient. but vital to our present understanding of astronomy). They include:HipparchusPtolemyCopernicusGalileoEudoxusThere were also many Egyptian, Mayan, and Chaldean astronomers whose names have been lost over time.
Venus, the second planet from the sun, is named for the Roman goddess of love and beauty. The planet - the only planet named after a female - may have been named for the most beautiful deity of her pantheon because it shone the brightest of the five planets known to ancient astronomers.
Jupiter Venus Pluto Mars Saturn Mercury Charon Minerva Juno
When seen in the morning, the planet Mercury was called Apollo. In the evening, it was named Hermes. The ancient astronomers still knew that the two names were refering to the same body.
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planet
There are two, actually. Venus is called the Morning Star as well as the Evening Star.
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The verb "names" is a regular transitive verb that can be used to identify or give a title to someone or something. It can also be used in the past tense form "named."
they are called astronomers.
They believe in the Greek gods but they gave them different names. Their Olympians were Jupiter, Juno, Mars, Vulcan, Ceres, Vesta, Venus, Mercury, Neptune, Minerva, Diana, Pheobus Apollo, Pluto, and Bacchus. They changed their original names from: Zeus to Jupiter, Posiden to Neptune, Hades to Pluto, Hera to Juno, Hermes to Mercury, Aphrodite to Venus, Ares to Mars, Dionysis to Bacchus, Apollo stayed the same, Athena to Minerva, Hestia to Vesta, and Hephestus to Vulcan.
Venus has no moons at all, not even one.