δόμος (dómos) is an ancient Greek word whose Romanized spelling begins with "dom-" and whose English meaning is "house." The masculine singular second declension noun in question serves as the inspiration for the later Latin equivalent domus. The pronunciation will be "DO-mos" in ancient Greek and "THO-mos" in Aeginan Greek.
There is no such word in Greek. Perhaps you were thinking of Latin - quite a different language!
"Ellinas" (Έλληνες) is the Greek word for "Greeks".
"Ναι" (pronounced "ne") in Greek means "yes" in English.
The English word for "bios" is "life".
It means small or little. actually it is not originally greek, it was latin.
"Against" is the English equivalent of the Greek prefix "anti-." The preposition contra is the Latin equivalent. An English derivative of the Greek prefix is the noun "antagonist." An English derivative of the Latin equivalent is the adjective "contrary."
that' not English so why put it in the "English to greek" category?
The Greek root crypt means "hidden" in English.
Eisai, in Greek, means "you are" in English.
The Greek word for millkros means small in English.
The Greek word demos means people or public in english
"Nai" in Greek means "Yes" in English
galaxy in greek is "γαλαξιας"(ghalaxias) and it means the same as in english.
The Greek Opalios means 'precious stone' in English
In Greek Dec means ten
Gymnasium,which we call in English means ''naked'' in Greek.
Gonad - from the Greek word "gone" which means generation or seed.
Kimberly means 'ruler' in old english. In greek 'Medora' or 'Madora' means ruler.