Yes. Same pony, different names.
Yes. night + mare = nightmare
A night mare is when you have a bad dream or something scarry
There are five named maria on the Moon: Mare Tranquillitatis, Mare Serenitatis, Mare Crisium, Mare Imbrium, and Mare Nectaris.
the two sides on the moon are highland and the mare. the mare are lower in altitude than the highlands . but there is no water on the moon so they are not literally seas .
Mare Crisium is illuminated from a few days after the New Moon until a few days after the Full Moon.
No, Nightmare Moon is not Twilight Sparkle's daughter. Nightmare Moon is actually Princess Luna, Twilight's fellow princess and sister. She became Nightmare Moon after being consumed by jealousy and bitterness, but was eventually restored to her true form through the efforts of Twilight and her friends.
Mares: Are fully grown filly's or adult female horses.Mare: Latin word for "sea".Mare: Used when describing the flat plains on the moon - as in Lunar Mare. A basaltic plain on the Moon
Mare Tranquillitatis (Latin for Sea of Tranquility) is a lunar mare that sits within the Tranquillitatis basin on the moon.
The ghost haunted the king to be a knight-mare because it's a play on words. "Knight-mare" is a pun on the word "nightmare," implying that the ghost's intention was to give the king bad dreams or haunt him during the night.
No, the term "mare" specifically refers to the dark, flat plains on the moon's surface formed by ancient volcanic activity. Mercury does not have lunar maria like the moon.
A mare is a female horse. Metaphorically, having a bad dream is compared to being on a disobedient horse that carries you where it wants to go, rather than where you want to go. And of course, sleep is usually done at night. Hence night + mare = nightmare.
Interestingly, the mare in nightmare has nothing to do with a female horse. Instead, it comes from Old English maere 'goblin, incubus.' The word was nigt-mare in 1300, and it referred to an evil female spirit afflicting sleepers with a feeling of suffocation. By 1350, it was nytmare and in 1440 it was nyghte mare. Mare 'goblin' is a cognate with Middle Dutch mare, maer 'incubus,' Old High German mara, Middle High German mar, mare(dialectical modern German Mahr 'nightmlare'), and Old Icelandic mara 'incubus.' Mare comes from the Proto-Germanic word *maron. Nightmare was used to describe 'a bad dream caused by an incubus' in the 16th century, and by 1829 it was used to describe 'a bad dream' in general. From: TakeOurWord.Com