With all the new technology of course it is
Greece's government used to be a government where everyone votes but, now Greece has a government like us. We in the United have a government where we have representatives. So to answer your question, there is no difference in governments beetween the U.S ans Greece.
Athens in modern times.
Yes. In modern times, Greece fought in World War 2 and Korea. In ancient times, Greece fought the Persian Wars.
yes, in both ancient and modern times
The most common government system until modern times was monarchy, where a single ruler, often a king or queen, held authority over the state. Monarchies existed in various forms across different civilizations, with power typically passed down through hereditary lines.
They are on completely different parts of the world. When it is daytime in Greece it is night in the US, so they have to have different times and so they are in different time zones.
They are not really comparable. Totally different times and societies many centuries apart. Comparisons would be overstretched.
Ancient Greece covered slightly different areas at various times through history, although broadly it covered the same area as modern-day Greece does today. You can see maps in the Sources and related links section, below.
People in modern day Greece wear western-style clothing (t-shirts and jeans, business suits etc.) just as the rest of the modern world does. If you are referring to Ancient Greece, people in those times wore chitons.
No, no, it was the glory that was Greece, and the grandeur that was Rome. Ancient Rome was certainly grand, and to modern thinking the Greece of ancient times seems glorious in many ways, with its art, architecture, literature, and philosophy.
Ancient means very old and this Greek era was a very long time ago. That's two thousand and more years ago. A lot of times references to Greece are actually to ancient Greece. But, there is also Greece - as is modern Greece.
Peter Murtagh has written: 'The Irish Times book of the year 2010' -- subject(s): Chronology, Modern History, History 'The rape of Greece' -- subject(s): Politics and government, History