Old English 'tigras' (plural), also Old French 'tigre' (c 1150) both from Latin 'tigris', from Greek 'tigris', from Ancient Persian; see Tigris River, connection unknown
No, the word 'tiger' is a noun; a word for a type of cat; a word for a thing.A pronoun is a word that takes the place of a noun in a sentence.The pronoun that takes the place of the noun 'tiger' is it.If the gender of the tiger is known, the pronouns he or she as a subject and him or her as an object in a sentence.EXAMPLESWe watched a lone tiger as it stepped through the tall grass.The tiger had two cubs which she watched carefully.The tiger saw an antelope but decided it was to far from him.
The greek word for rock is petro.
Eleftheria is the greek word for freedom.
The Greek word Kyrios means lord or master.
It ultimately comes from Greek, the word genesismeaning 'birth'.
tiger came from the Greek word tirgri
The word Armageddon is taken from the Greek word "Har Ma
The word "tiger" is taken from the Greek word "tigris", which is possibly derived from a Persian source meaning "arrow", a reference to the animal's speed and also the origin for the name of the Tigris river. In American English, "tigress" was first recorded in 1611. It was one of the many species originally described by Linnaeus in his 18th century work, Systema Naturae: he called it Felis tigris. The generic component of its scientific designation, Panthera tigris, is often presumed to derive from Greek pan- ("all") and theron("beast"), but this may be a folk etymology. Although it came into English through the classical languages, panthera is probably of East Asian origin, meaning "the yellowish animal", or "whitish-yellow".-- From Wikipedia
The word in Latin for 'tiger' is tigris. The Latin word traces back to the more ancient, classical Greek language. The word also may be used as a proper noun in the case of the famous Tigris River.
You really don't mean what is the greek mythology name for tiger, you mean the greek name for tiger. Because, friend, greek mythology is not a language
Osteo- is taken from the Greek word "osteon" meaning "bone."
The two Greek words taken from the word "biology" are "bios" meaning life and "logos" meaning study or knowledge. Together they form the word "biology" which means the study of life.
The word "tiger" was probably derived from the Greek word "Tigris". The Greeks possibly borrowed this word from a Persian word meaning "arrow", due to the animal's swiftness.
The Greek word that chasm came from is the word abyss. An abyss is a very deep, deep hole that is so deep it never seems to have a bottom.
The word "Sphinx" came from the greek language, there is a similar creature with the wings of a bird, the body of a tiger and the face of a women, and they called it the sphinx
Tiger = Kaika
The term is taken from the Greek chole, bile, and stasis, standing still