Iliad is a Greek epic poem. It was written by Homer, and told the story of how at the pinnacle of the Trojan war, Achilles managed to finally kill Hector once and for all.
A word that has the same meaning as another word is a synonym.
Some words that contain the root word "onym" are synonym (meaning a word with a similar meaning), antonym (meaning a word with the opposite meaning), and homonym (meaning a word that sounds the same but has a different meaning).
The root word meaning "nerve" is "neur-" from the Greek word "neuron" meaning sinew or nerve.
The word "pestilence" has a root meaning plague, which comes from the Latin word "pestis" meaning plague.
The connotative meaning of a word refers to the emotions, associations, or implications that the word carries beyond its literal definition, while the denotative meaning is the literal definition or primary meaning of the word.
Hektor, oldest son of Hecuba and Priam in The Illiad. Originally meaning 'valiant warrior', derivated to 'one (or such) who never gives up', current meaning 'to pester continuously'
illiad
The Illiad.
No Hercules is not in the Illiad.
"The Illiad"
Achilles from the story, The Illiad. It is said that Alexander slept with a copy of The Illiad under his pillow at night.
It is not told in the Illiad.
The Illiad.
A Trojan priest in the Illiad.
illiad
'MEANING' in other words can be the 'vocabulary' of a word or the 'essence' of the word as to what the word precisely means. OR meaning is the meaning of meaning what you just said meaning
herculese and the illiad and the oddysea