The Greeks told myths to tell stories of the past or they used ledgends
How did Greeks explain the past
because they like to fake everything in life in general haha
Reaching back a looooong way and making a guess, 'say goodbye to the ancient Greeks' or 'tell the ancient Greeks goodbye' might be a translation. And that's a definite maybe.
Let's say I buy a fancy sword. It is brand new. Experts can tell it is a recent version, and was manufactured. Let's say you found a sword. You can tell it is old. Experts say it "dates back to the past" based on the metals used and it was flattened by a blacksmith. But they can't give an exact time "in the past". But they know the object dates back to the past.
They used myths from Zeus simply because they thought that the world was flat from the many pictures and murals made by the artists long ago.
Personally, I can tell the stories for both, but the Greeks came first, but then Rome conquered them, and basically copied them,
had toldhad + past participleI had told him before to stop kicking the ball.
I assume you mean the person who ran 26 miles from Marathon to Athens to announce the victory won there by the Greeks. His name according to Herodotus was Pheidippides.
told- past will tell- future telling- present ---------------------------- Past: I told you not to do that; I did tell you that the day before yesterday too! Present : I am telling you not to do that. Future: will tell you again tomorrow not to do that.
Yes, "tell" is a verb. The past tense of "tell" is "told."
The past participle of "tell" is "told."
OKAY the answer before this one is so wrong no not all greeks are fat I'm greek and ill tell you this I'm not even close to fat and there are lots of greeks who have the best bodies seriously look up on google images greek girls and see how skinny they are
Only a verb has a past tense, so for example, you can say I eat pickles, in the present, or I ate pickles, in the past. Before is not a verb, it is an adverb. So, I ate pickles before I ate oranges. Before never changes, unlike verbs. Even though it does tell us that something happened in the past (earlier than something else) it is not a past tense.
The past tense is told.
The past participle of "tell" is "told."
The past form of "tell" is "told," and the past participle is also "told."
The past participle of "tell" is "told".
The past participle of "tell" is "told."