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The proper noun for a Greek citizen is a Greek.The word 'Greek' is a proper adjective used to describe someone or something of or from Greece.The word 'Greek' is a proper noun as a word for a person of or from Greece.
It just means you don't understand something. The image is of the other person speaking a foreign language, such as Greek, that you don't understand.
"Septikos" is a Greek word that means "putrefying." It is often used in medical contexts to describe something that is causing or related to decay or putrefaction.
I think you might be looking for tyrannos, though actually the word meant something slightly different. Many tyrannoi were indeed cruel and/or mean, but strictly speaking the Greek word just meant that they had come to power by unconventional means and was, at least originally, not pejorative.
"Skopein" is a Greek word that means "to watch" or "to see." It is the root of the English word "scope," which refers to the range or extent of something.
geometria
Grammar.
The Greek term for a course dealing with rules of language is "Grammatikḗ."
Its γλωσσολογία (glossologia/glossology).
Computers, cell phones, telephones, and letters.
There were many "Princes of Thebes" given that you are dealing with generations of Greek myth and history.
You can't BECOME Greek! It's not a job title or something! You are born Greek.
Mimema is the Greek term for "something imitated" which is derived from mimeisthai : 'to imitate'.
something
something
In greek its προκαθορισμένος (prokathorismenos) and it means something that is bound to happen.
Greek stands for something or someone that comes from Greece, or it stands for the laguage. Examples: A Greek woman, the woman speaks greek.