It is not. It is a Latin adjective, mortalis, meaning deadly.
Marpessa
Psyche, in Greek mythology, was the daughter-in-law of Aphrodite, her son Eros' wife. She was a mortal princess who was absolutely stunning, though not as pretty as aphrodite.
The name of 'morphine' is derived from the Greek god Morpheus who was known as the god of dreams .
PANDORA was the very first woman who was formed out of clay by the gods.
The Celts and the Greeks are both derived from the Indo-European peoples. I'm sure some of the basic stories that are related in each mythology come from their relative past, but the developed, Greek Mythology came first.
bc no
If it is supposed to be derived from mythology, it seems to me a misprint for 'auroral', having to do with the dawn, Latin Aurora (Greek Eos).
Marpessa
Hercules in Roman, Heracles in Greek.
According to Greek mythology, Pandora was the first mortal woman.
Yes, a Hero in greek mythology was cosiderd as a mortal or human that had extordenary powers or was an offspring of a God-Mortal, DemiGod-Mortal or God-DemiGod and inherting powers by a godly gen of one of the parents making their powers relevent.
A demigod in Greek "mythology" is a person with ONE god parent and ONE mortal parent. Demigods are not only in Greek mythology, in all but one case demigods are half mortal and half god. The only...
Elpenor is mortal. He is a character from Greek mythology who was a companion of Odysseus and died in the Odyssey.
Psyche, in Greek mythology, was the daughter-in-law of Aphrodite, her son Eros' wife. She was a mortal princess who was absolutely stunning, though not as pretty as aphrodite.
Well,according to Greek Mythology no mortal could never reach the top of Mount Olympus.
Aristotle was a real person. He was a Greek philosopher who lived between 384 BC - 322 BC. This of course means that he was a mortal, but wasn't part of Greek mythology.
The name of 'morphine' is derived from the Greek god Morpheus who was known as the god of dreams .