As a goddess, she didn't have flaws, per se, but if you wanted to characterize her with a flaw, it would be hubris, in thinking she could influence or outwit Zeus. But in reality, she just fell prey to greater gods.
her daughter
Hecate : Heck-ate or Heah-KAH-tae
Ate (blind folly) would be the mother of anyone who claims to have a Greek God or Goddess for a parent today.
The Roman equivalent of the Greek goddess Ate is often associated with the concept of mischief, ruin, and folly. While she does not have a widely recognized Roman name, her attributes and influence can be linked to the Roman goddess Discordia, who embodies strife and discord. In Roman literature, Ate is sometimes referred to simply as "Ate" as well.
Porsche is not a Greek Goddess. Porsche is a maker of vehicles.
her daughter
God : Hermes (Mercury)Goddess: Ate
The name of Greek God is Teos.
In Greek myth, this is Eris, twin-sister to Ares, mother of Ate, goddess of delusion.
Synia is known as the goddess of temptation. She has the ability to take over the mind of anyone's whose will is weak.
Hecate : Heck-ate or Heah-KAH-tae
Ate (blind folly) would be the mother of anyone who claims to have a Greek God or Goddess for a parent today.
The Roman equivalent of the Greek goddess Ate is often associated with the concept of mischief, ruin, and folly. While she does not have a widely recognized Roman name, her attributes and influence can be linked to the Roman goddess Discordia, who embodies strife and discord. In Roman literature, Ate is sometimes referred to simply as "Ate" as well.
Ate- Greek goddess of revengeAntony mentions it in his soliloquy in Julius Caesar (Act 3 Scene 1)
In Greek mythology, the goddess of folly is often associated with the deity Tyche, who represents chance, luck, and fate. Tyche is seen as capricious and unpredictable, embodying the whims of fortune and misfortune. In Roman mythology, the goddess of folly may be linked to the figure of Folly, as personified in works like Erasmus's "Praise of Folly."
There is no such Greek Goddess.
who is the goddess of themoon of greek