Greece is the name of the country. Greek is the language or culture of a person from Greece. For example, you would say "I am Greek." not "I am Greece." So , no they do not mean the same thing.
The truth is that there is no difference. The only thing that makes you think that there is a difference is the name. The Greek myths are all from the ancient times, hence "Ancient Greece"
they are not the same. I guess the only thing that they have in common is the fact that they are both gods.
Same thing God believes in Hebrew.
In Greece.
Greece is the name of the country. Greek is the language or culture of a person from Greece. For example, you would say "I am Greek." not "I am Greece." So , no they do not mean the same thing.
No. Gresse is a town in France. Greek is the nationality of a person born in Greece.
The same thing you learned in school but in Greek
Strange question, Greece is a country, if you are from Greece & have the blood you are Greek. I.E. Greece is a country, Greeks are its people.
No, Greece refers to the country located in southeastern Europe, while Greek is an adjective used to describe something or someone that is related to Greece. The language spoken in Greece is also called Greek.
Strange question, Greece is a country, if you are from Greece & have the blood you are Greek. I.E. Greece is a country, Greeks are its people.
Greece is the country. Greek is anything that comes from Greece, like the Greek language, the Greeks (the people of Greece) etc.
The truth is that there is no difference. The only thing that makes you think that there is a difference is the name. The Greek myths are all from the ancient times, hence "Ancient Greece"
No, back then there was no such thing as chocolate in Ancient Greece, but now there must be.
The first Greek God was in fact not a God but a "thing". It was Chaos which is in a nutshell Chaos.
Greek is a language and an ethnicity. Greece is a modern country. There is no city called Greek or Greece.
Yes. They are both under the Ecumenical Patriarch.