In english, Thermopolaye
It's Greek, from therme meaning warm or hot. The so called three hundred Spartans fought the Persians at the pass of Thermopylae. It is often translated as "the hot gates"
Thermos is a Greek word for "hot."
Hot Gates - this was a mountain pass where there were thermal springs.
The Hot Gates was created in 1965.
No, it means warm, hot. It is an adjective, not a noun.
Its θερμικός (thermikos) from θερμός (thermos) meaning hot.
The Greek would barricade themselves in the ''Heaven-hot-Gates'' and make a last stand.
Bill Gates is not Greek. He is an American who was born of parents whose last names, Gates and Maxwell, indicate an English/Scottish background. Further, although Gates now espouses no religion, when he was young his family attended a Congregational church, not a Greek Orthodox church.
Synyster Gates is not gay. Synyster Gates has a wife, Valary DiBidenetto's twin sister, Michelle.
In Greek mythology, dreams came to sleepers through two gates, one of horn and one on ivory. The names of the gates are a play on words: in the Greek language, the word for horn sounds like the word for "fulfill," in contrast to the word for ivory which sounds like the word for "deceive." These images appear in a number of classic Greek poems, including the Odyssey. See link for further information.The second question seems to confuse the word "ivory," which is elephant tusk, for "ivy" which is a climbing vine. It is ivythat grows on walls and fences, and needs to be regularly pruned away from gates and arches.
thermostat, thermometer, thermos, hypothermia
YES