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Hope this helps

Answer:well for one the geeks has their own version of the gods aka Zeus, Poseidon, Hades. Where as the romans had Jupiter, Neptune, Pluto.

The romans also thought that Neptune was a bad sign

Also

Explanation:

Greek and Roman mythology are similar because they are both great pieces of work. ... In conclusion Roman Mythology disregards mortal deeds while Greek Mythology praises those deeds. An interesting difference between the two mythologies is the fact that Roman Gods did not have an actual personality.

Both Greece and Rome were peninsulas. They both had plenty of mountains, they were both surrounded by sea(s) on three sides, and they both had a Mediterranean climate. But Rome had fertile soil on their Italian Peninsula, while the Greeks had poor soil on their Pelopennesus Peninsula.

Aside from the obvious differences in language (one culture speaks as much Latin as the Vatican, while the other is all Greek to me), the Romans’ art largely imitated that of the Greeks. The Romans, however, developed a more naturalistic approach to their art. Greek statesmen and generals, like their gods, are recognizable but physically idealized, whereas sculptures, mosaics or frescoes of Romans, from emperors to ordinary everyday people, betray physical quirks and nuances of expression that make them more human. Look into the face of Caligula’s bust, for example, and in retrospect you might find yourself detecting something in those eyes that’s not quite right…

Although both places had agricultural economies that exported wheat, olive oil and wine, Athens built its power by sea trade, whereas Rome was more predatory, growing by conquest. Greek governments varied from kings and oligarchs to the totalitarian, racist, warrior culture of Sparta and the direct democracy of Athens, whereas Roman kings gave way to a representative, elected republic—until it was displaced by the power of the emperors. Athenian citizens could all vote, but Athenian women were not citizens, whereas in Rome they were. Athens was the center of Greece’s Golden Age around 500–300 BCE, whereas Rome’s came in the last century of the Republic and in the first century or two of the Empire.