ko!un!n'piov(means cemetry)
it is a un real myth or real myth get it myth-ologytype your answer here......
FalseComes from the Greek άτομο [atomo] : α-(prefix = u- un-) + τομή/τέμνω (=cut).So it means "unable to be divided", undivided, un-divide-able
The term atom is greek, and a literal translation is un-cut.
I do not require an Appollo (Greek god, example of male beauty)
If you mean the prefix "uni-" (unicellular, etc.), then it comes from the Latin word unus, meaning "one". (The nearly-equivalent prefix "mono-", however, comes from Greek.)
Hagio- from the Greek word Hagios meaning "saint" and or "holy"
French : Un, Une Latin : unus Spanish : uno, una Portuguese : um, uma German : Eins Welsh : un Greek : ena Hebrew: ekhad (אחד) Persian: Yek Arabic: wahad
"Atom" in Greek is "άτομο" (átomo), which translates to "indivisible" or "uncuttable." This term was used by ancient philosophers to describe the smallest unit of matter that could not be divided further.
Aurelio Peretti has written: 'Luciano: un intellettuale greco contro Roma' -- subject(s): Criticism and interpretation, Greek Satire, History and criticism, In literature, Intellectual life, Satire, Greek 'Epirrema e tragedia'
thinkin' that 'un wuz a Greek named Pythagoras (sp)
Logic is a Greek word; il- is a Latin prefix ( from in- meaning "un-", the n becoming an l before the l of logic.