No one. This doesn't happen.
It's Lisa who tells Bart to "Go to bed" which he purposely misunderstands as "Go to bread". This happens in Season Eight's My Sister My Sitter
Of course not.
Everyone knows who Homer Simpson is, and have heard of Washington...but do they really know who he is? For the american citizens, we could tell that they know who he is, many people around the world have no idea (first US president). Washington being the first president of the US, makes him soooo powerful, but haha you know... now days people prefer watching T.V and they don't care about the past....which is way I could tell, Mr.Simpson, Homer Simpson is more famous than Mr. President, George Washington.
The Odyssey and The Iliad
The property was reconstructed in the south after the civil was by Brazilian people winning 5 world cups. and Homer Simpson became gay after the confederate army didn't past "no ask, no tell act".
Homer was famous because his two poems The Odyssey and Iliad were the most influential poems in the world and the two oldest surviving pieces of Greek literature. Most literary scholars agree that he was the main influence of the modern western canon, and everything written after his poems were published were based on or influenced by him.Not only that, his poems and his writing style was so great that the Romans sought to make their own epics. Even Alexander the Great walked around with a copy of the Iliad because it was packed full of useful advice, e.g. the best way to bake bread (yes, really - how to bake bread!) and how to fix a chariot wheel (whaat? yeah what!).
Only Homer himself could answer, but he is not around to tell us.
Can anyone who has already video chated Cody Simpson please tell me how I AM DESPARATE!
Homer wrote about the court. He told us about how the court worked.
What do you mean? I can tell you bread belong in the carbohydrate foog group.......
I have no idea. Will someone please tell me?
In the opening, Homer only invokes the "goddess" or "muse", but not by name. Probably because any contemporary of Homer would have taken for granted that the goddess or Muse in question would have been Calliope, the Muse of Epic Poetry.