In latin it's Jupiter. In Greek it is both Zeus(ζέυς) and Dias (Δίας).
In Greek mythology, Poseidon, Hades, and Zeus do not have specific planet names. They are associated with the Earth and Mount Olympus, the heavens where the Greek gods resided, rather than with planets in the solar system.
The name Jupiter comes from the Latin word "Iuppiter," which is derived from the combination of "Iupp," a euphemistic form of "Iovis" meaning "father Jove," and "potens" meaning "powerful." Jupiter was the king of the Roman gods and the equivalent of the Greek god Zeus.
The Latin name for Zeus is "Jupiter."
Jupiter got the names by thunder and sky. ---------------------------------------------------------------------- Zeus is the Greek name for the king of the Gods Jupiter is the Roman name for the king of the Gods
No. Zeus corresponds to Tyr, as both their names are related etymologically. Tyr comes from a Proto-Germanic word Tiwaz. Which in turn comes from the Proto-Indo-European word Dhyeu. From Dhyeu, we get the Latin word Deus, the Greek Zeus, Hittite: Sius, Slavic: Divu, and in Sanskrit: Dyu. In short, all these words translate simply to "deity" or "god."
Zeus is his Greek name - Jupiter in Latin. Zeus is his Greek name. Jupiter is his Roman name.Zeus is the Greek name. Do you mean Jupiter or Jove, which were his Latin names?
Zeus is Greek for the Latin term Jupiter.
Zeus is the Greek name, Jupiter is the Latin Name
Zeus is the greek name / Jupiter is the roman name
the greek name is Zeus and the roman name is Jupiter.
Fatismus, podia
Yes but with different names (Zeus=Greek, Jupiter/Jove=Roman)
Latin and Greek
Eleanor Dickey has written: 'Colloquial and literary Latin' -- subject(s): Colloquial Latin language, Speech in literature, Style, Latin literature, History and criticism, Latin language 'Greek forms of address' -- subject(s): Address, Forms of, Forms of Address, Greek Names, Greek language, Names, Greek, Names, Personal, Personal Names, Social aspects, Social aspects of Greek language, Social interaction 'Latin forms of address' -- subject(s): Address, Forms of, Forms of Address, Latin Names, Latin language, Names, Latin, Names, Personal, Personal Names, Social aspects, Social aspects of Latin language, Social interaction
Latin or Greek
Scientific names are based on Latin and Greek. These languages are used because they are considered universal and do not change over time, ensuring consistency in the names of organisms across different languages and regions.
Saturn is not Greek but the Roman equivalent of Cronus. His sons (Roman names) are Jupiter, Neptune and Pluto. Their Greek names are Zeus, Poseidon and Hades.