This is the right answer: Trust me, I got it from my science teacher: Its the Phalanges.
it was won due to the Trojan horse which was filled with greek soldiers. they came out at midnight and ransacked everything
The company named after the ancient Greek goddess of victory is the company named Nike.
There is no Greek god named Mattias.
No, Earth is the only planet not named after a Roman or Greek god or goddess; it is, instead, named after the the stuff we stand on: earth.
the battle of mr. hincker
The Battle of Marathon
The Achilles tendon, named after the hero Achilles.
it was won due to the Trojan horse which was filled with greek soldiers. they came out at midnight and ransacked everything
The Greek father god was named Zeus.
it was named from greek
Mercury was named after the greek god Hermes Venus was named after the greek goddess of love, Aphrodite Earth was named after the greek goddess Endymion or Gaea Mars was named after the greek God of War Ares Jupiter was named after the greek Ruler of the Gods Zeus Saturn was named after the greek god of harvest, Cronos or Kronos Uranus was named after the greek god Uranus (same) he was also Gaea's husband Neptune was named after the greek god of the sea, Poseidon Pluto was named after the greek god of the underworld Hades He was a gloomy, stern and dull god if you are looking for more information on these gods go to http://www.geocities.com/athens/troy/2774/mythgods.html
Hippocrates, (ca. 460 BC - ca. 370 BC), a Greek philosopher and physition known as, 'The Father Of Medicine', would be my best guess.
Greek. it was named after a Greek goddess
Achondroplasia was named by the French physician Gabriel Roux in 1878. The term is derived from the Greek words "a" (without), "chondro" (cartilage), and "plasia" (formation), reflecting the abnormal development of cartilage in affected individuals.
The tendon that is named after a Greek hero is the Achilles tendon.
The Greek god Cronus was named Saturn(us) in Rome.
The Achilles Tendon is named after a Greek warrior.