Thirty-three quadrillion, three hundred thirty-three trillion, three hundred thirty-three billion, three hundred thirty-three million, three hundred thirty-three thousand, three hundred thirty-three hundred-quadrillionths.
A triangle has three sides and three angles.
Three and three fourths plus three is six and three fourths.
three is prime nine equals three times three
3x3x3=27
The Norns.
Fate of Norns was created on -20-06-05.
The Norse goddess of fate is usually referred to as the Norns. They are three female beings who control the destiny of gods and humans by weaving the threads of fate. Each Norn is associated with a specific aspect of destiny – Urd (fate), Verdandi (present), and Skuld (future).
The Norns
No, Nuremberg (Nurnberg in German) was not named after the Norns. The city's name is thought to have originated from the Old High German word "nourenberc," meaning "rocky hill."
Belldandy, Skuld, and Urd, from "Oh My Goddess!" are the three Norns of Norse mythology. Since the Norns are considered to be analagous to the Fates of Greek history, and their father is Zeus, it is a reasonable assumtion that the father of Belldandy, Skuld, and Urd, who has not been revealed yet, is noe other than Odin.
There isn't one, but multiple; The Norns are female entities that rule over the destiny of men as well as other gods. Supposedly the Norns appear when a person is born and determine that person's entire future, good or bad.
The deity of the Norns who dictated the past, present and future.
Norse mythology and Greco-Roman mythology are not equivalent; they did not share concepts like Greeks and Romans did. However, the Norns bear a strong resemblance to the Fates in Greek mythology.The Fates were a trio of goddesses (Clotho, Lachesis and Atropo) who spun a thread for each human life and cut it based on how long they destined that human to live. One sister (Clotho) spun the thread; another measured it (Lachesis) and the third cut it (Atropo).The Norns are a group of gods and goddesses of which three are considered particulary important (Urdr, Verdandi and Skuld) because they tend to the tree that upholds the nine worlds of Norse mythology, Yggdrasil. Other norns are responsible for prophesying the destiny of each individual. The Norse believed in a concept they called wyrd which is essentially similar to the Christian concept of free will, so while the Fates determined the length of a person's life, the Norns likely only prophesied a range of possibilities for a person's future.
In the Norse mythology there are the 3 norns: Verdandi, Urd and Skuld Moirai
The Norns are Norse goddesses of fate; Urðr (Wyrd), Verðandi and Skuld dwell beside the Well of Urðr.
The Destinies, or Fates (Moirae) were the Greek goddesses who controlled men's lives. They even held sway over the Olympian gods.The three Fates were:- Clotho, the spinner, who spun the thread of a person's life- Lachesis, the apportioner, who decided each person's lifespan- Atropos (the inevitable) who cut the thread to a length, at the end of which was deathTheir Roman equivalents were the Parcae: Nona, Decima, and Morta. In Norse mythology, there are the Norns, among whom are the giant Jotun females named Uror, Veroandi, and Skuld who tend the world-tree Yggdrasil. These three and other norns would similarly spin the thread of Fate and decide the destinies of men and gods.(see the related link)