oceanid การใช้
- Also according to Hesiod, there were three thousand Oceanids.
- The Oceanids appear and attempt to comfort Prometheus by conversing with him.
- Aglaea is one of three daughters of Zeus and either the Oceanid"
- Just as in Greek myth the Oceanids are the daughters of the nine daughters.
- By the Oceanid Perse, Helios became the father of Ae雝es, Circe and Pasipha?
- The larger than human size statues depict eight Oceanids and a pair of aquatic horses.
- However, Hesiod's classification of Peitho as an Oceanid is contradicted by other sources.
- Homer and Hesiod establish that a belief in the Oceanid existed in the earliest literary times.
- Hesiod calls them two " lovely-haired " creatures, the daughters of Thaumas and the Oceanid Iris.
- Her name appears in Hesiod's catalogue of Oceanid names; no other literary mention of her survives.
- It was named after Greek goddess of fortune, Tyche, which is also the name of one of the Oceanids.
- The production used a real skene building whose roof was used as the landing and dance platform for the Chorus of Oceanids.
- Prometheus reflects on the voices before returning to his own suffering at Jupiter's hands and recalling his love for the Oceanid Asia.
- One author, Rudolph Sabor, sees a link between the Oceanids'treatment of Prometheus and the Rhinemaidens'initial tolerance of Alberich.
- Wagner was an enthusiastic reader of Aeschylus, including his " Prometheus Bound " which has a chorus of Oceanids or water nymphs.
- The Harpies, in Hesiod the daughters of Thaumas and the Oceanid Electra, in one source, are said to be the daughters of Typhon.
- When next shown later in the series, Mera and AJ are on Oceanid, a waterworld that is being exploited by aliens for its resources.
- Hesiod, and the Homeric Hymn to Demeter, mention either a different Calypso or possibly the same Calypso as one of the Oceanid daughters of Doris.
- "' Doris "'(; ????? ), an Oceanid, was a sea nymph in Greek mythology, whose name represented the bounty of the sea.
- The common and scientific names are probably derived from the Greek oceanid Clymene, although it has also been argued that it may instead come from the Greek word for " notorious ".
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