'to onoma tou' (his name)
You would say "Brandon," as it has no Greek equivalent.
"Otis." (It is a Greek origin name).
βρικόλακες is how you say vampires in Greek.
You would say "Tyler." It is not a name that translates to anything Greek.
It doent have a greek name (as it is not a native horse in these lands) we call it by his English name μάστανγκ (mustang).
You don't say which type of name. The Greek word is Helios. The element helium is named from it.
It is the term that Greeks use for themselves. Greek is a name invented by the Romans. We say Greek, they say Hellenic.
I would say Pavlina!
Latin: HYDROGENIUM Greek: υδρογόνο (ydrogóno) Scientists simply say, "Hydrogen"
Theseus IS his Greek name. In Greek it would look like this: Θησεύς. It would be said "theh-say-OOS" with the pitch rising ont he last syllable.
The modern name's Kriti, the ancient Krete.
The name Jill does not exist in Greek; there is no Greek equivalent for the name, therefore no translation either. If the name derives from Julia, one could say that the Greek equivalent is Ιουλία (ee-oo-Lee-ah), the female form of Julius (a Latin name).