People of ancient Greece.
Sinônimos
Examples for "hellenes"
Examples for "hellenes"
1The Hellenes were fighting the Persians in the pass for their Fatherland.
2The other Hellenes wondered at the strength and stability of his work.
3At first he thought that the ships were those of the Hellenes.
4But all the same was the outlook of those Hellenes blackly pessimistic.
5For this reason they always encamped at a distance from the Hellenes.
1Let him think I read ancient Greek literature in the original language.
2In ancient Greek times, Zeno of Elea devised several paradoxes involving infinity.
3He viewed the drama with all the reverence of an ancient Greek.
4For the demon's sake, she hoped the man wasn't an ancient Greek.
5You see, in ancient Greek myth, there was a god named Proteus.
1Achivi), one of the four chief divisions of the ancient greek peoples, descended, according to legend, from Achaeus, son of Xuthus, son of Hellen.
1The ancient Greeks also believed them to be good for the brain.
2Oriental women are of that kind, and so were the ancient Greeks.
3Do you think the ancient Greeks really believed the story of Phaeton?
4Sir, Since the ancient Greeks there have been many theories on natural law.
5Such, in general, was the non-progressive outlook of the ancient Greeks.
6The ancient Greeks voted by stones; these shall vote by tombstones.
7We are, perhaps, more difficult to surprise than the ancient Greeks.
8But the ancient Greeks were the noblest nation the world has ever seen.
9The ancient Greeks called the insect Μἁντιϛ, the divine, the prophet.
10PICKLES.-Theancient Greeks and Romans held their pickles in high estimation.
11The ancient Greeks, observes Taine, understood life in a new and original manner.
12Just because the Ancient Greeks liked it doesn't make it right.
13The survivals of totemism among the ancient Greeks are very interesting.
14Among the ancient Greeks and Romans honor was more sought after than wealth.
15The ancient Greeks and Hebrews viewed work as a bad thing.
16The Ancient Greeks imagined each of us as cells in the greater being.
Translations for ancient greeks