It is hard to say that anything started with the letter "f" because it would usually be translated as "pH" (being closer to the Greek letter phi), but anything you could phonetically spell with a pH could also be spelled with an f, so some words would be: Fos (light), fanari (beacon), fimi (fame), and fantasma (ghost or spirit).
Homer the poet?
I presume you mean ancient greek words that start with an H when written in English.
Well, these would be greek words starting with a vowel or an r that should be pronounced with an aspiration. Those letters would have the daseia diacritic marked above them to signify that they should be read in rough breathing.
e.g (Όμηρος -------> Homer
(Ύπνωσις -------> Hypnosis
(Ρόδος -------> Rhodes
ostracism: exluding, banishing someone from the society who was suspected to become a tyrant. (the Greeks voted for the person by writing his name on a piece of clay; the person who got his name on the most pieces was exiled.)
democratic government, Diomede ( a Greek) Darius the king
In Greek mythology Uranus was the Greek god of the heavens.
alpha
It means:agrammatos
rhombus
There is no letter A in the Greek language or the ancient Greek language.
I dont think the Greeks had a letter which can be directly compared to the modern day Q
There are no words in Greek that start with q but some have q in them
Trick question - there is no letter J in the Greek alphabet - j is an English replacement of I, easier to say by non-Greeks, like Jason or Jupiter in Greek is Iason and Iupiter
Trick question. There is no F in the Greek alphabet. Nearest is Phi = pH - which you find in our adaptions of Greek to English, such as philosophy, philanthrophy, phallic, aphorism.
· Athens, Greece
finis is associated to ancient Greece because its an ancient greek word!
veta
Venus Venus is Roman for Aphrodite the Greek goddess of love