eftixismeni mera tou agiou valentinou ( ευτυχισμένη μέρα του αγίου βαλεντίνου )
No. The ancient Greek did not use the English language. Because there was no English language in that time. English language derived from Latin which was the official language of Roman Empire and the Roman Empire is the successor of ancient Greek the golden age of Greece.
Nobody deliberately learned Greek just to write Greek mythology. The Greek people spoke, read, and wrote in the Greek language, and were from an area known as Greece. They also happened to write a lot of mythology that we still read today. To the Greek people, writing stories in the Greek language was just as natural as us writing in English.
Marissa= Μαρίσσα. keep in mind that you need to have greek characters installed on your pc, if to see the translation correctly.
P. Koutsoubos has written: 'Greek-english dictionary' -- subject(s): Dictionaries, English, English language, Greek language, Modern, Modern Greek language
Aristotle wrote primarily in Ancient Greek. He was a philosopher and scientist whose works cover a wide range of subjects, including ethics, politics, metaphysics, logic, and biology. His writings have had a profound influence on Western thought.
English is a Germanic language and derived from the same sources as Dutch and German. Greek is a language isolate distantly related to English. Latin is an Italic language distantly related to English.
Greek
hannah
Ellinas - Greek man. Ellinida - Greek woman. Ellinika - Greek language.
In Greek, "halogen" is: αλογόνου
The Greek language has influenced English through direct loanwords such as "democracy" and "philosophy," as well as through the adoption of Greek roots in scientific and technical terms like "biology" or "telecommunication." Many English words also have Greek etymologies, contributing to the richness and diversity of the language.
It's the same in english as it is in Greek.