Want this question answered?
Pluto is not the Roman "name" for Hades. Pluto is the name of the Roman god, based on the Greek god Hades. In other words, the names Pluto and Hades are not related.
Some believe the 3 Greek words translated to English as 'hell' are actually an interpolation - that is something added to or altering/corrupting with something foreign which in this case is an 'idea' of men. Be that as it may, there are 3 words translated as hell from the Greek. They are: Hades - meaning unseen or grave or pit and is equivalent to 'sheol' in Hebrew. Gehenna - valley of Hinnom and a burning city garbage dump. Tartaroo/tartarus - a dark place of restraint for the fallen angels used one time in the Bible. See link below
Hades is another name for the Underworld or ,in other words Hell.
"Nut" is one of those words that has been a part of English for as long as there has been an English. It is clearly related to the words from related languages such as Dutch or German for the same thing which suggest that they all derive from a common ancestral Teutonic root in a common ancestral Teutonic language which wasn't written down.
No. They Greek language uses a different alphabet than English.
Hades, as a deity in mythology, is spoken of, he does not speak; interpretations of his words based in mythology are many.
Pluto is not the Roman "name" for Hades. Pluto is the name of the Roman god, based on the Greek god Hades. In other words, the names Pluto and Hades are not related.
Tagalog: Pamamahala sa Negosyo English: Business Administration
A:A deity is a god. The two words are synonyms.
A word referring 2 the deity? the answer is God, Almighty, Allah, and Lord. Those are words that refers to the deity.
They are on the Related Link below.
hot as Hades - hot as hell (in other words, fiendishly hot)
month and monday
Deity, Supreme Being.
Deity, deist, deism,
"Vita" means "life." There many related English words, such as vitamin, vital, and vitality.
All I can think of at this time is "Deity", but that is really from the male counterpart of 'dea' which is 'deus'. I'll try to update this with a better response later.