Depends on what type of c.
C as in cylinder is Sigma.
C as in cat is Kappa.
C as in chorus is Chi.
There isn't much difference between Chi and Kappa.
No, but the letter Kappa has the same sound as a hard c.
There is no Q in the ancient greek alphabet. There was a qoppa, but it was an allophone for kappa - see http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Qoppa I am doing a project for school right now on Ancient Greece. We have to have a word for each letter of the alphabet. For "Q" I put quail. The Greek god Hephaestus's' favorite bird was the quail. There are not any other words involved with Ancient Greece that start with "Q". I hope this helped you.
erm... Ancient Greek is from Ancient Greece :P
There are none. the J sound does not exist in Greek.
Trick question - there is no letter J in the Greek alphabet - j is an English replacement of I, easier to say by non-Greeks, like Jason or Jupiter in Greek is Iason and Iupiter
The letter C in Greek is called "sigma." It is equivalent to the English letter S.
In Greek mythology Chaos was the Greek god who created earth. His name begins with the letter C.
alpha
Lambda.
Alphabet is Ancient Greek. It comes from the Greek word "Alphabetos". Alpha is the Greek letter for A. Beta is the Greek letter for B.
'Khilioi (χίλιοι)' is Ancient Greek for 'thousand'
ΣΕΝΝΙΦΕΡ Please note, however, that there is no "J" in the ancient greek alphabet, so it was replaced with the letter it would have been in ancient greek; "Sigma" or "S".
The seventh letter of the greek alphabet is eta In modern Greek its η,Η (Eta) In ancient Greek it was ζ,Ζ (Zeta). That is because the ancient 6, which was the ''στ,ΣΤ'' is no longer used.
rhombus
It means:agrammatos
Yodeling.
No, there is no letter Q in the Ancient Greek alphabet. The Greek alphabet does not have a character that corresponds directly to the Latin letter Q. Instead, Greek uses the letter "κ" (kappa) to represent the "k" sound, and the "kw" sound is typically represented by "κου" (kappa followed by omicron and upsilon).