Ceres.
the goddess of grain and the fertility of the earth.
it refers to jove aka Jupiter
The English word library comes from the Latin word liberwhich means book. There is no direct translation for the word library.
November comes from the number nine. November was the ninth month in the old Roman.
The word is actually "pontifiex" in the singular and "pontifices" in the plural. It comes from the Latin word for bridge which is "pons". A pontifex is also a Roman high priest.
The word cereal comes from the Latin word Cerealis, referring to Ceres, Roman goddess of grain.
Cereal. The word is derived from Ceres, the Roman goddess of harvest.
Ceres is not a Greek god she is Roman. She is the Greek equivalent to Demeter Goddess of Agriculture. This is how we got the name for cereal.
There was no Roman god named after cereal. Instead, 'cereal' is derived from the name of a Roman goddess, Ceres, who was the goddess of grain and the harvest. Her Greek equivalent was Demeter.
The word is of Latin origin 'Cerealis' from Ceres the Roman Goddess of Agriculture
Cereal comes from Ceres who is the Roman equivalent to Demeter
Actually, I believe it is Roman, not Greek. Ceres, Goddess of grain.
From Latin 'cerealis' meaning 'of grain', derived from Ceres, the Roman God of Agriculture
Cereal The word cereal derives from Ceres, commemorating her association with edible grains. Ceres was discovered on January 1, 1801 by Italian Giuseppe Piazzi. He discovered it while searching for a star. Ceres is named after the goddess of growing plants, harvest, and motherly love. Ceres is commonly known as the roman goddess of agriculture
Cereal = any grass that produces an edible grain, such as oat, wheat, or rice or the grain itself used as food. From the Latin cerealis = of grainThe word cereal derives from Ceres, the name of the Roman goddess of harvest and agriculture.
Yes. It is named after Ceres in the roman naming or also known as Demeter the goddess of the harvest. She is also the mother of Persephone the queen of the underworld, Tartus, and wife to Hades (Pluto)(yes like the planet and the dog).
The word cereal describing grass which produces edible grain is recorded in English back to the early nineteenth century; it comes from French céréale, from Latin Cerealis "of grain," originally "of Ceres". Ceres was the Roman goddess of agriculture.