Not really. In Roman mythology, the Furies were three female deities of vengeance. This was the word the Romans used to translate the Greek Erinyes, but the word came before the mythology, not the other way around.
The Furies (or Erinyes) were female embodiments of vengeance.
it comes from the furies, who the gods sent to torment people who made them mad, ergo furious
The Fire. Furious = Fiery.
From the Greek god Flora
The word "furious" doesn't come from Greek at all. It comes from the Latin word "furiosus" meaning "full of rage"
From the Greek goddess "Hygeia", a goddess of good health.
The word "psychology" is derived from the Greek words "psyche" (soul or mind) and "logos" (study). It can be traced back to the ancient Greeks and their interest in understanding the soul and mental processes. The term was first used in the 16th century to describe the study of mind and behavior.
There isn't one of which I'm aware. the word comes from the Greek word syringa, which means "tube, channel or tunnel".
You are probably thinking of the mythical Cronos: the youngest and most terrible of the children of Uranus. However, the word chronic comes from the Greek word "kronikos," meaning "of time."
rhadamanthus- the underworld god of justice
According to many sources, "heckle" is of Germanic origin and derives from the name of a tool used to comb out plant fibers before spinning. There's nothing Greek or mythological about it.
The word is not mythological, just meaning abundant or plentiful. Comes from Latin 'opulentus' and from 'opes' meaning wealth
Pantheon means; (pan) "all" and (theon) "gods".