It's from the Season 14 episode titled "C.E. D'oh!"
Homer is trying to get Marge in the mood:
Homer: But it's St. Valentines Day! God wants us to do it.
Marge: You're so cute when you're begging for sex. But I'm just too tired.
God.
It was the one with the grapes of wrath and when bob and Larry went to an island
It would depend on your personal sense of decency or morality but one risque line from The Simpsons would be Bart at the breakfast table saying he could "walk around with Bart Junior hanging out". The implication being he's referring to his 'manhood' (or in his case 'boyhood'), but in actuality he's referring to a pet frog. - At the end of a Christmas episode, that featured Katy Perry as a live guest star w/ puppet Simpsons characters. The Moe puppet turns his back to the camera and kisses Katy on her on her bellybutton however Katy responds with the line, "That's not my bellybutton". - From The Simpsons Movie there are few which is why it was rated PG13, seeing Bart completely naked while skateboarding could be considered inappropriate. Marge saying "throw the God damn bomb" & Homer flipping the bird to the mob should be mentioned.
No. Homer was Greek and used the Greek name Zeus for the chief God. Jupiter or alternatively Jove are Roman names for the chief God.
The world of warcraft episode
Homer isn't a greek god.
God.
God.
Homer is not a god. He was a mere mortal who wrote the Iliad and the Odyssey. These are sometimes considered to be the Greek bible, but they were also criticised for unfairly portraying the gods as having human-like failings.
Homer was not a god. He was the author of two mythological stories, the Iliad and the Oddysey.
homer
Not a God. He fought at Troy and is famous from the stories the Odyssey and the Iliad by Homer.
It was the one with the grapes of wrath and when bob and Larry went to an island
he fell from the havens
Homer
Homer
Homer wasn't a god, he was a poet. He is most recognized for his works the Iliad and the Odyssey, which are among the oldest written works of western literature.