Zeus: Eagle
Hera: Peacock
Athena: Owl
Aphrodite: Dove
Ares: Dog
Hestia: Pig
Posiedon: Horse
Artemis: Deer
Hephaestus: Donkey
As a sacrifice, because the people lived with fear of the gods
Yes, they did. Most gods had a specific animal to represent them, eg. Poseidon had a dolphin, and Athena had an Owl.
Greek gods and goddesses could change their appearances from human (old, young, hair color - exc.) to animals (cows, swans, fly, goat).
At altars dedicated to the various gods. Often animals would be killed at the altar as a gift to the god.
because they told us about gods, commoners, animals, wars, etc.
chickens and dogs and lepords bye frow
There was no god specifically for dogs. The Greek gods represented forces of nature of intangible concepts. They did not worship animals or totems.
The Greek gods typically turned into things having to do with nature - mist, mountains, trees, rivers - as the Greek gods and goddesses were born of nature (Gaea: Earth), but they could also become animals such as cows, deer, horses - which they were in some way connected with, or which were sacred to them.
No, the Greek gods are myth.
Gods from Greek Mythology:AphroditeApolloArtemisAthenaDionysusHeraHermesPoseidonZeus
Yes, the Greek gods are immortal.
Their labour as plough animals and transport; their skins for leather and clothing; their flesh for food; and their entrails as food-offerings for the gods, having invented the fiction that the gods preferred the guts so that they didn't have to waste good food on the gods.