There's an ATTENDENT ON DUTY line (which is super-slow and super-long), and there is an EZ DEATH line. Those among the dead who don't wish to be judged can simply choose the EZ DEATH which leads to the Asphodel Fields. The Asphodel Fields are kind of like purgatory - neither good nor bad, just blah.
The two ATTENDENT ON DUTY lines veer to either side of Cerberus. The EZ DEATH line flows right between Cerberus's legs. The dead spirits don't even have to crouch as they make their way through - he's a ginormous puppy.
Exactly from the book The Lightning Thief Chapter 18
Something causes misery or death
Euthanasia in Greek is εὐθανασία meaning "good death".
Do you mean the guy that fell of a horse? His name is Bellerophon
Thanatos is the Greek personification of death.
The English phrase "angel of death" has a Greek translation. When written with the English alphabet this phrase translates into the Greek "angelos tou thanatou".
The word for death in Greek is θάνατος[thanatos]
There is not a modern Greek god of death, such as the ancient god Hades.
thanatos - θάνατος It Means death
Thanatos was the Greek deity of Death, being immortal in Greek myth he never died.
Romans did not think much of the Underworld and death and ghosts; these aspects of their religion were largely borrowed from Greek myth.
If you mean "centaur" he/it was a composite creature from Greek mythology.If you mean "centaur" he/it was a composite creature from Greek mythology.If you mean "centaur" he/it was a composite creature from Greek mythology.If you mean "centaur" he/it was a composite creature from Greek mythology.If you mean "centaur" he/it was a composite creature from Greek mythology.If you mean "centaur" he/it was a composite creature from Greek mythology.If you mean "centaur" he/it was a composite creature from Greek mythology.If you mean "centaur" he/it was a composite creature from Greek mythology.If you mean "centaur" he/it was a composite creature from Greek mythology.
from Greek nekros corpse. Word Origin and History for necro- before vowels, necr-, word-forming element meaning "death, corpse, dead tissue," from comb. form of Greek nekros "dead body, corpse, dead person," from PIE *nek- "death, natural death" (cf.