έξω απο 'δω (exo apo do). ΄δω is actually εδω.
The phonetic pronunciation is dasos. You can see the word in Greek and here it pronounced at the related link below.
Here they are! Messiah Μεσσίας Saviour Σωτήρας Sorry if they are wrong
Im going to go out on a limb here, but i think Phil is from philo the greek word for love and then anthropy anthro the greek word for humans so philanthropy is love of humans
Archaios is not an English word, it is Greek. Here is what the Related Link (below) has to say about it: "Our word 'archaic' derives from the Greek archaios, meaning simply 'old' or 'ancient.'"
Yes the word Olympics comes from the Greek as a reference to Mt. Olympus, where the Ancient games were held in honor of the Greek Gods.. I have to make a correction here. The word Olympics comes from the greek word Olympia, the place in Peloponnese, where the Ancient games were held in honor of the gods. Mt Olympus is the place where the greek gods where living, their residence in other words.
I can't easily write it in Greek here, but in Roman letters it's apeiron, "without limit".
No, it's English. (I'm not trying to be a smart-aleck here; it's not derived from either Latin or Greek either.)
I rather enjoy Greek yoghurt,The temple looked Greek.She has some Greek in her blood.
Συνδέομαι (Sintheomai) "Th" here is pronounced like "th" in the words: those, these, that
The word ella in Greek means come on, or come here. It is very commonly used in day to day conversation.
Elysium
βοήθεια (voehtea, pronounced vaugh-ee-thea. Tthea here is pronounced as in "theatre")