Pterodactyl comes from the Greek meaning "winged finger". Ptero is the Greek for winged, so it comes from the Greek. In Greek, the "p" isn't silent.
pots made by greek people :P
erm... Ancient Greek is from Ancient Greece :P
P on the vestment of priest is R in Greek. On priest's vestments we see XP which are KR in Greek, first two letters of Christos in Greek.
P. Koutsoubos has written: 'Greek-english dictionary' -- subject(s): Dictionaries, English, English language, Greek language, Modern, Modern Greek language
The two Greek letters that begin with P and have three letters are PHI and PSI. There are no Greek letters that end with S.
Patras is a city in Greece. It begins with P.
Olympia :P
Plato
Persephone (Greek) Proserpine/Proserpina (Roman)Pan (Greek)Poseidon (Greek)Pluto (Roman)
The p. At least, it did in ancient greek and I'm fairly sure it still will do. Funny fact:π (pi) stood for a P, but the actual p sign, ρ (rho) stood for an R. Quite confusing when you start learning ancient greek and have to pronounce the words.
P. B. Shelly said it. His statement was "Keats was a Greek."