aphrodite造句(1) The ancient Greeks dedicated many shrines to Aphrodite.
(2) Zeus and Aphrodite were ancient Greek deities.
(3) Aphrodite was the ancient Greek goddess of love.
(4) Ares and Aphrodite were the ancient Greek deities of war and love..
(5) Aphrodite using her power chiefly to ensnare and betray.
(6) Aphrodite, of course, was on the side of Paris.
(7) Later Aphrodite herself brought ambrosia.
(8) He gave Aphrodite the golden apple.
(9) Aphrodite belongs in the place of healing, for while love stabs the heart, passion heals.
(10) Just before the sword would strike Smryna, Aphrodite changes her into a myrrh tree.
(11) Paris awarded it to Aphrodite, beginning a chain of events that led to the Trojan War9.
(12) Both Hera and Aphrodite bear children, but we hardly see these Goddesses in this capacity.
(13) Once Narcissus had fallen under the spell of Aphrodite he was lost.
(14) The story of Aphrodite does include an oblique reference to Demeter.
(15) The origin of Aphrodite goes back to the most basic elements of nature, the Earth and the Sky.
(16) He scorned Aphrodite, he worshiped only Artemis, the huntress chaste and fair.
(17) The Greeks called her Aphrodite.
(18) Aphrodite was the goddess who triggered the Trojan War.
(19) Proud Aphrodite rejected them all.
(20) Aphrodite soon left him for Ares ( Mars ), the handsome god of war.
(21) Aphrodite was the most beautiful woman of all mortals 7 and immortals.
(22) Aphrodite fled weeping to Mount Olympus to be healed and comforted.
(23) Aphrodite had been given in marriage to Hehaestus, the lame Smith - god.
(24) In Greek myth, love is personified by the goddess Aphrodite.
(25) So matters stood when Paris gave the golden apple to Aphrodite.
(26) The two are said to have been turned into lions because of some affront offered either to Zeus or to Aphrodite.
(27) Shakespeare himself first makes use of the myth in his poem Venus and Adonis, where, significantly, Adonis rejects Aphrodite.
(28) The female figure on the knife handle appears to resemble Aphrodite or Venus, the goddess of love.
(29) She can hold her own against all torch-bearing, sword-wielding comers, then woo the gods like Aphrodite.
(30) No one knows who created the statue of the Aphrodite of Melos.