The Greek word for Fruit is Karpos (Lexical Form).
It's ''karpos'' . Oddly enough it's the same word for things that came from a tree, like oranges etc. Not many words in Greek have so differnet meanings and spell the same.
No. The Greek Chloris who was the equivalent of the Roman Flora had a son with Zephyros named Karpos (Fruit).
Calamus (the Latin name for Kalamos) is the son of the god Maiandros (who is god of the Maeander river) in Greek mythology. Kalamos was in love with another boy called Karpos. During a swimming competition between the two, Karpos drowned and subsequently, Kalamos was so distraught that he let himself drown too and was transformed into a water reed. For this reason, Kalamos is Greek for 'reed'.
Big fruit or Having big fruit is the literal translation of 'macrocarpa'. The word comes from the combination of two Greek words. One is the adjective 'makros', which means 'big'. The other is the noun 'karpos', which means 'fruit'.
There is no such word in Greek.
It is the Greek word for "battle".
In Greek, the word "collo" does not have a specific meaning. It is not a Greek word.
No, the word "crazy" does not mean perfect in either Hebrew or Greek.
"naughtiness" is not a Greek word, it is English.
Ecos mean house in Greek
If you mean what is the greek word for "wood sound" then its: Ξύλινος ήχος [xeelinos ehos] If you mean HOW DOES the Greek word for wood sound, then it's xeelo