If you were a character in Greek mythology, odds are Homer called you “lion-hearted Achilles” or “Ares, sacker of cities” or “Hector, breaker of horses” at least once every three sentences. And if you are not a character in Greek mythology, now you can find out what he WOULD have called you had you possessed the good sense to be ancient, Greek, and fictional. Here is the link. COPY AND PASTE YOUR QUIZ RESULTS!
24 Comments
Marisol Chavez
2/26/2020 08:02:33 am
BEST OF THE ACHAEANS
Reply
Josh Gunneson
2/26/2020 08:02:42 am
SWIFT-FOOTED
Reply
Katie Bird
2/26/2020 08:02:54 am
ROUSER OF ARMIES
Reply
Marielle
2/26/2020 08:03:01 am
SWIFT-FOOTED
Reply
kenna Ferner
2/26/2020 08:03:08 am
GIANT-KILLER
Reply
Kaylie Arnoldink
2/26/2020 08:03:16 am
BREAKER OF HORSES
Reply
Morgan Engelman
2/26/2020 08:03:26 am
DELIGHTING IN THUNDER
Reply
Autumn
2/26/2020 08:03:33 am
ROUSER OF ARMIES
Reply
Makayla Weaver
2/26/2020 08:03:40 am
BRIGHT-EYED
Reply
Talyn
2/26/2020 08:03:45 am
THE GREAT TELLER OF TALES
Reply
Kialya Grooters
2/26/2020 08:03:52 am
DELIGHTING IN THUNDER
Reply
Sierra Weener
2/26/2020 08:04:01 am
THE GREAT TELLER OF TALES
Reply
Dylan M VanTuinen
2/26/2020 08:04:06 am
DELIGHTING IN THUNDER
Reply
Damien Cook
2/26/2020 08:04:12 am
DELIGHTING IN THUNDER
Reply
Naomi Reeder
2/26/2020 08:04:20 am
SWIFT-FOOTED
Reply
Catherine Szenas
2/26/2020 08:04:29 am
BRIGHT-EYED
Reply
Bryce RIke
2/26/2020 08:04:45 am
You are swift-footed Bryce. This is the same epithet Homer used to describe Achilles roughly eight thousand times over the course of The Iliad and even a few times in The Odyssey. (You’ll remember “swift-footed” Achilles as that guy who took an arrow to the ankle during the Trojan War and died, so good luck with that!)
Reply
Craig Stoepker
2/26/2020 08:05:31 am
ROUSER OF ARMIES
Reply
Paige Dionne
2/26/2020 08:05:41 am
BRIGHT-EYED
Reply
Lorenzo Alvarado
2/26/2020 08:06:04 am
BRIGHT-EYED
Reply
Clare Whitsell
2/26/2020 08:06:34 am
You are Clare, great teller of tales. The Greek hero Odysseus had many epithets ascribed to him (others included “much-enduring,” “cunning,” and “man of twists and turns”), and this was one of them, so you’re in good company.
Reply
Lucy
2/26/2020 08:07:16 am
You are Lucy, curse of men. Feel free to sign all your checks that way. This is the same epithet Homer attributed to Ares, the god of war. Ares was the lover of Aphrodite and basically everyone’s least favorite god. The ancient Greeks liked to tell stories that ended with him getting caught in nets and smacked in the face with boulders.
Reply
Kelsey Berghorst
2/26/2020 08:07:27 am
BREAKER OF HORSES
Reply
Thomas Korreck
2/26/2020 04:58:06 pm
THE GREAT TELLER OF TALES
Reply
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. Archives
September 2021
Categories |