minerva

listen to the pronunciation of minerva
Английский Язык - Турецкий язык
{i} akıl tanrıçası [mit.]
{i} Minerva [mit.]
(Mitoloji) Zeka tanrıçasına romalıların verdiği ad
Romalıların aklı ve hikmet tanrıçası
Minerva
Akıl tanrıçası
owl of minerva
(Mitoloji) minerva baykuşu
Английский Язык - Английский Язык
The goddess of wisdom, especially strategic warfare, and the arts, especially crafts and in particular weaving; daughter of Jupiter and Juno
{i} goddess of intelligence (Roman Mythology); woman of great intelligence
In Roman religion, the goddess of handicrafts, the professions, the arts, and, later, war. She was commonly identified with the Greek Athena. Some scholars believe that worship of Minerva began when Athena's cult was introduced at Rome from Etruria. Minerva was one of the Capitoline triad, along with Jupiter and Juno, and her shrine in Rome was a meeting place for craftsmen's guilds. The worship of Minerva attained its greatest vogue under the emperor Domitian, who claimed her special protection
(Roman mythology) goddess of wisdom; counterpart of Greek Athena
The goddess of wisdom, of war, of the arts and sciences, of poetry, and of spinning and weaving; identified with the Grecian Pallas Athene
Ida Minerva Tarbell
born Nov. 5, 1857, Erie county, Pa., U.S. died Jan. 6, 1944, Bridgeport, Conn. U.S. investigative journalist, lecturer, and chronicler of American industry. In 1891 Tarbell went to Paris, where she supported herself by writing for U.S. magazines. She became best known for The History of the Standard Oil Company (1904), an account of the rise of a business monopoly that first appeared serially in McClure's Magazine and led to the government's epochal antitrust suit against the company. For her work Tarbell became one of the journalists Theodore Roosevelt dubbed muckrakers
Турецкий язык - Английский Язык
Minerva
minerva

    Расстановка переносов

    Mi·ner·va

    Турецкое произношение

    mınırvı

    Произношение

    /məˈnərvə/ /məˈnɜrvə/

    Этимология

    () From Proto-Indo-European *men-es-wah₂, extended from the stem *men-s- (“mind”) (Sanskrit (manas), compare manas-vin- (“full of mind or sense”)), ultimately from the Proto-Indo-European *men- (“to think”).
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