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Month: February; Secondary Flower: Iris. The most intellectual of spring flowers, irises represent wisdom and courage.Named for the Greek goddess of the rainbow, this birth flower also symbolizes ...
This is a list of goddesses, deities regarded as female or mostly feminine in gender. ... Holy Spirit is feminine for some Christians [3] [better source needed]
Flora, goddess of flowers and springtime; Inuus, god of sexual intercourse; Jugatinus, the god who joins the pair in marriage; Juno, goddess of marriage and childbirth, equivalent to the Greek goddess Hera; has the epithet Lucina [15] Liber, god of viniculture, wine, and male fertility, equivalent to Greek Dionysus; in archaic Lavinium, a ...
Artemis, goddess of the hunt, the dark, the light, the moon, wild animals, nature, wilderness, childbirth, virginity, fertility, young girls, and health and plague in women and childhood; Aurae, nymphs of the breezes; Chloris, goddess of flowers; Cronus, god of the harvest; Cybele, Phrygian goddess of the fertile earth and wild animals
September Birth Flower: Aster. As the summer months wrap up, colorful asters are just getting started. Symbols of wisdom and love, asters are linked to Greek mythology (the goddess Astraea wept ...
Find out your birth month flower in the list ahead. January: Carnation. Kicking off the year with an array of color—the carnation is one of those flowers that's often available in a rainbow of hues.
The name Xōchiquetzal is a compound of xōchitl (“flower”) and quetzalli (“precious feather; quetzal tail feather”). In Classical Nahuatl morphology, the first element in a compound modifies the second and thus the goddess' name can literally be taken to mean “flower precious feather” or ”flower quetzal feather”.
A goddess suckling a toddler and seated in the wicker chair characteristic of Gallo-Roman goddesses (2nd or 3rd century, Bordeaux) Lucina as a title of the birth goddess is usually seen as a metaphor for bringing the newborn into the light (lux, lucis). [59] Luces, plural ("lights"), can mean "periods of light, daylight hours, days."