One could argue that Hermes was friends with the professor, Fry, and Lila. Dr. Zoidberg was his enemy. I would argue that as a number crunching, jerk-wad, bureaucrat he had no friends, not even his son, and everyone secretly wished he would die a horrible painful death.
Medus and Hermes are enemies because Medus was with Hermes wife and Hermes caught them together
Cronus, Argus, Mikaboshi, Makkari, the Titans and Typhon are the enemies of Hermes. Hermes is a quick Olympian messenger of God. He is also the god of wealth, boundaries and transitions.
Cronus, Argus, Mikaboshi, Makkari, the Titans and Typhon are the enemies of Hermes. Hermes is a quick Olympian messenger of God. He is also the god of wealth, boundaries and transitions.
Enemies are, by definition not friends.
In Greek mythology, Hermes, the messenger of the gods, did not have many outright enemies. However, he did have conflicts with Apollo, the god of the sun, music, and prophecy, over various matters, such as the invention of the lyre. Additionally, Hermes was known for his trickster nature, which sometimes caused tension with other gods and mortals. Overall, Hermes was more of a mischievous and cunning character rather than having specific enemies in mythology.
Hermes was a greeek god. Fry was a norse god. I do not think they had any relationship or encounter in classical myth. So they were not enemies in the original myth garymarkbe@aol.com
They Are Enemies
Cronus, Argus, Mikaboshi, Makkari, the Titans and Typhon are the enemies of Hermes. Hermes is a quick Olympian messenger of God. He is also the god of wealth, boundaries and transitions.
ya 10 enemies and 200 friends
try to be nice to your friends but be nicer to your enemies so then your enemies are your friends. eventually every 1 will be your friends!
Oh, dude, Hermes had a few enemies in Greek mythology. Like, he had beef with the giant Argus Panoptes, who had like, a hundred eyes or something. And then there was also the god Apollo, who got all jealous and accused Hermes of stealing his cattle. Classic drama in the ancient Greek world, man.
enemies