That's Zeus.
Similar to the English word "hail" it was a form of greeting, much like hello.
Austria
No, Macbeth was already Thane of Glamis.Quote from original Mabeth scene 3."FIRST WITCH.All hail, Macbeth! hail to thee, Thane of Glamis!SECOND WITCH.All hail, Macbeth! hail to thee, Thane of Cawdor!THIRD WITCH.All hail, Macbeth! that shalt be king hereafter!""MACBETH.Stay, you imperfect speakers, tell me more:By Sinel's death I know I am Thane of Glamis;But how of Cawdor? The Thane of Cawdor lives...":)
Hitler modelled his 'Third Riech' on the Roman Empire. This can easily be seen in the classical building project which he embarked on. The open handed salute was copied from the Roman military salute. With the salute were spoken the words 'Sieg Hiel' which translated means "Hail to the call of victory" which was sometimes combined with a heel click.
Very carefully.
The translation of "pounded by hail" in Tagalog is "binayo ng bato-batong yelo."
mighty, strong, and joyful
Hi or hail centurion Ave=hail or hi Centuriin=a roman ranking
Angelus
The "Hail Mary" prayer in Latin is translated as "Ave Maria."
冰雹玛丽亚 (phonetically read Bīngbáo mǎlìyà)
it's a traditional 'hail and farewell' word, literal translation 'rejoice.' the singular is khaire.
Similar to the English word "hail" it was a form of greeting, much like hello.
The victims loved the ss i am telling you dis because i am Hitla hail Hitla hail Hitla hail Hitla hail Hitla hail Hitla hail Hitla hail Hitla hail Hitla hail Hitla hail Hitla hail Hitla scisim de German gorhegano
The English translation of the Latin greeting 'Salve, Regina' is the following: Hail, Queen. The word-by-word translation is as follows: 'salve' means 'hail'; and 'regina' means 'queen'. According to classical Latin, the pronunciation is the following: SAHL-way ray-GEE-nah. According to liturgical Latin, the pronunciation is as follows: SAHL-vay ray-DJEE-nah.
Hail Hail the Celts Are Here was created in 1961.
It was one of the original crazy Snickers commercials. "Hail Citizen - render some peanuts!" (snack vendor in Roman Colosseum tosses him a Snickers bar).