I'm not sure about few, but one is mono. This word does come from the Greek.
The English word "phobia" comes from the Greek word "phobos," which means fear.
The word "few" comes from Middle English "fewe," which is derived from Old English "feawe" meaning "little, not many."
The root word of oligarchy is "oligo-", which comes from the Greek word "oligoi" meaning "few".
The Greek root "olig" means "few" or "little." It is commonly used in English to denote a small or inadequate quantity of something, such as in the word "oligarchy," meaning a system of government where power is held by only a few individuals.
The root word for "year" is "yeār" which comes from the Old English word "gear" meaning "cycle of the sun."
The root word for oligarchy is archy.
There are a few Greek variants of the English word "wealth". One of the more common Greek translations would be the word "ploutou".
The Greek word Oli, means "few''. The word "oligarchy" derives from the Greek for "few ruling."
The prefix olig- comes from the Greek oligos, meaning little or few. Therefore an oligarchy is a government by the elite few, and oligochete worms have relatively few bristles.
There are many possibilities when translating the English word "friend" into Latin. A few possibilities are amicus, comes, intimus, necessarius.
Its oligarchy from the Greek ολιγαρχία (oligarchia).
μερικά (merika)
It means that Sparta was ruled by a few, powerful men (the two kings and, later on, the Euphors). Oligarchy comes from the greek word, Ὀλιγαρχία, or Oligarkhia.
English has thousands of Greek words. Here are a few: telegraph telephone dinosaur philospophy chemistry physics psychology zealot
"oli", derived from 'oligos', the Greek word for 'few'.
The word setting is a verbal noun formed from the English word set, which has neither Latin or Greek origins.It is one of a huge number of English words derived from the Germanic dialects of northern Germany and southern Denmark, brought to England in the 5th century and the following few hundred years by Angles, Saxons, Jutes, Frisians, Wends, Franks and others.The Old English verb was settan, to put or place.
The letters PFITH can spell a few short words in English : I if it hi hip tip fit hit pit pi phi (Greek letters) pith
The Greek concept of 'polis' is a "city state".The word is untranslated when incorporated into English words such as metropolis. The English word 'Metropolis' is from the same Greek word, which, in Greek, means 'parent state', but the usage in English is quite different from the Greek meaning of metropolisTherefore 'city-state' would be the direct equivalent of polis. However, there are very few city-states today, and it would be best to check if you wish to apply 'polis' (city-state) status to any modern city, state or country.For more information, see Related links below this box.