Nome: VANESA PARODI (sirius_brightest_star@yahoo.com.ar) 18/5/2007
Take a look at Mike's INCANTATION lyrics:
Incantations
Dah - yaa - naa Looh - ooh - naa Looh - she - naa
(repeat chorus 18 times)
Looh - naa Looh - ooh - naa
(repeat chorus)
Dah - yaa - naa Looh - she - naa Looh - naa
Have you noticed that DahYaaNaa is DAIANA and that LooNaa is actually LUNA? fröhlich
In Roman mythology, Diana was the virgin goddess of the hunt, in literature the equivalent of the Greek goddess Artemis, though in cult she was Italic in origin. Born with her twin brother Apollo on the island of Delos, Diana was the daughter of Jupiter and Latona.
Diana was the perpetually virginal huntress goddess, associated with wild animals and woodlands. She also later became a moon goddess, supplanting Luna, and was an emblem of chastity. Oak groves were especially sacred to her. She was praised in poetry for her strength, athletic grace, beauty and hunting skill. In practice she made up a trinity with two other Roman deities: Egeria the water nymph, her servant and assistant midwife; and Virbius, the woodland god. In her etymology, "Diana" is simply :"the Goddess", with a Greek parallel in the name of Dione at Dodona.
In Greek mythology, Selene ( "moon") was an archaic lunar deity and the daughter of the titans Hyperion and Theia. In Roman mythology the moon goddess was Luna.
Like most moon deities, Selene plays a fairly large role in her pantheon. However, Selene was eventually largely supplanted by Artemis, and Luna by Diana. In the collection known as the Homeric hymns, there is a Hymn to Selene (xxxii), paired with the hymn to Helios; in its Selene is addressed as "far-winged", an epithet ordinarily applied to birds.
The etymology of Selene is uncertain, but if the word is of Greek origin, it is likely connected to the word selas, meaning "light".[2] Boreion Selas is the Greek name for Aurora Borealis. The name is the root of selenology, the study of the geology of the Moon. The chemical element selenium was also named after Selene.
The goddess of the moon, Luna, had a temple on the Aventine Hill. It was built in the sixth century BC, but was destroyed in the Great Fire of Rome during Nero's reign. There was also a temple dedicated to Luna Noctiluca ("Luna that shines by night") on the Palatine Hill.
Amor,
Vanesa aka Sirius
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