Aphrodite was the protector of the sailors.
the sailors
love, beauty, and fertility, as well as being the protector of sailors.
Eros is the god of love (Aphrodite's son) Aphrodite is the protector of love not the maker... Trust me I'm Greek...
Hera is not only the protector of marriage, she was also the goddess of fertility, childbirth, marriage, and was the queen and wife of Zeus.
aphrodite's
Aphrodite's Tears by Salem, Aphrodite of Hatred by Izakaron, Aphrodite's Winter by Cathedral, Aphrodite by Ash, Aphrodite Marine by Misanthrope, Green-Eyed Aphrodite by The Cable Car Theory...I don't know that many, are any of those it?
Artemis is related to either goddess vaguely, in the sense that she is given some domain of fertility as the protector of women giving birth, but she would like prefer hunting to war, and chastity to sex, and honor to love. Aphrodite is the ancient Greek counterpart of Ishtar as goddess of sex and love, there are depictions of Aphrodite going to war - though in Homer, she fled battle when she was harmed. Ishtar is the Assyrian/Babylon goddess of love, war, sex, and fertility.
Depending on context, protector can be translated as: Beschützer Panzer, e.g. Brustpanzer - chest protector Schutz, e.g. Gewebeschutz - textile protector Schutzschalter, e.g. Stromschutzschalter - surge protector Schützer, e.g. Knieschützer - knee protector
Yes, "protector" is a noun, a singular, common noun, a word for someone or something that protects someone or something. The noun protector is a concrete or abstract noun, depending on use; for example: A pocket protector or a splash protector is a concrete noun. A friend and protector or a protector of the faith is an abstract noun.
Protector is a noun.
Aphrodite is the god of beauty
I believe that Rhydon loves the Protector, but I only found that out by trading it with the Protector on