Hebe - meaning and definition. What is Hebe
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What (who) is Hebe - definition

WIKIMEDIA DISAMBIGUATION PAGE
HEBE; Hebe (disambiguation); Hebe (album); Hebe (character)

French frigate Hébé (1782)         
WARSHIP
French frigate Hébé (1781); HMS Hebe (1782)
Hébé was a 38-gun of the French Navy, lead ship of the . The British Royal Navy captured her in 1782 and took her into service as HMS Hebe.
hebe         
['hi:bi]
¦ noun an evergreen flowering shrub with spikes of mauve, pink, or white flowers, native to New Zealand. [Genus Hebe.]
Origin
mod. L., named after the Greek goddess Hebe.
Hebe         
·noun An African ape; the hamadryas.
II. Hebe ·noun The goddess of youth, daughter of Jupiter and Juno. She was believed to have the power of restoring youth and beauty to those who had lost them.

Wikipedia

Hebe
Examples of use of Hebe
1. Hebe de Bonafini was referring to the good relations the group enjoys with President Nestor Kirchner who has done much to revoke the immunity from prosecution of former military leaders.
2. The rally was led by Hebe de Bonafini, a leader of the most outspoken wing of the Mothers of the Plaza de Mayo _ who have long demanded an accounting for missing sons and daughters.
3. They‘ll have the same privileges as ever," said Hebe Bonafini, veteran leader of the Mothers of the Disappeared, a group that has marched outside the presidential palace every Thursday for nearly 30 years demanding to know the whereabouts of their children.
4. Hebe de Bonafini, an activist of the Mothers of the Plaza de Mayo, called the announcement spectacular‘‘ and said she hoped it would bring to light a part of our history that was dark, obscure and papered over.‘‘ Bonafini said the right–wing death squad killings, disappearances and other violence in the early 1'70s preceding the military coup, marked a period when the horror began.‘‘ Isabel Peron married Juan Peron years after the death of his first wife, the well–known Eva Peron.
5. "The search for the truth must go in every direction." Hebe de Bonafini, an activist of the Mothers of the Plaza de Mayo, said the courts must cast light on a "part of our history that was dark, obscure and papered over." Isabel Peron was sworn in as president in 1'74 after the death of her husband, the father of Argentina‘s ruling political party and three–time president.