According to an online translator, 'you' in Greek is:
εσείς
Greek: di- means two eg: dioxide di- means across/apart eg: diagonal Latin: di- means away eg: digress
I was going to say Nico Di Angelo XD but i found skoteeno(dark) angelos(angel)
You would say Ha-Di : )
The word two does not have a Greek root but a Latin one.
means two or double
di-di-dit dah dit di-dah-di-dit di-dah-di-dit di-dah
Cypriots Speak their own dialect of Greek, aswell as Standard Greek. Thyere are a few ways to say this. I would use "Ti kaneis" may sound like "Di Ganeis" Don't forget that many people in Cyprus are Turks, speaking Turkish...But I can't tell you how they would say how are you.
Hesiodus has written: 'L' Esiodo con gli inni di Orfeo e di Proclo filosofo' -- subject(s): Didactic poetry, Greek, Greek Didactic poetry, Greek Religious poetry, Religious poetry, Greek, Translations into Italian
L. Di Segni has written: 'Dated Greek inscriptions from Palestine from the Roman and Byzantine periods' -- subject(s): Antiquities, Archaeology, Greek Inscriptions
di- is a Greek prefix meaning 'two' tri- is a Greek prefix meaning 'three' They correspond to the number of phosphates in ADP and ATP.
The Greek prefix for apart or across is "dia-".
how do you say unite in greek