Tuesday, August 16th, 2011 at
11:18 pm
i would like a tattoo of my daughter's name in ancient greek.
her name is hollie.
if anybody could help me with the translation, i would be so grateful.
thx in advance.
Friday, June 10th, 2011 at
3:37 pm
I've a sudden love for the Aeolic dialect of Ancient Greek, and I was wondering if there was a place online that gave lessons in Aeolic. Does anyone here know of such a site?
Monday, May 30th, 2011 at
6:47 am
yes, how do you write "Ace" in ancient Greek? I need to know for project, and I'm unsure of the "c" mostly..
Friday, March 18th, 2011 at
4:04 am
I'm trying to find "Romans 11:17-21" as it would appear in ancient greek (the book itself, not the actual verse) I would also like to see the phrase "Grafted in". It would also be helpful if someone could tell me whether using roman numerals to depict verse numbers is appropriate for a christian and if so how to depict the verses above. thanks
Friday, January 28th, 2011 at
6:34 am
I'm trying to translate words and phrases from English to Greek and/or Ancient Greek, but I've had great difficulty finding an online dictionary that translates according to these two conditions...
(1) The Greek words must be in the Latin alphabet (i.e. a, b, c) NOT in the Greek alphabet (i.e. alpha, betta, gamma), and
(2) It must also NOT be "Greeklish" - the transliteration of the Greek Alphabet (i.e. letter-by-letter converstion of delta to D and gamma to G), but rather an OFFICIAL translation for that word.
I'm not sure how else to express it, but perhaps an example will help... In Greek "helios" means "sun" and "deus" means "god" and "hypnos means "sleep". These are translations in the Latin alphabet that are not transliterations. What I am looking for is a resource (preferably online) that translates any other English word (like "source" or freedom" or "flow") in that way.
If you have any information on such a website, I would greatly appreciate it! Thank you!
Wednesday, November 24th, 2010 at
3:47 pm
Hi, I'm like 13 best I have the desire to learn ancient greek and I don't know where to start.I can't afford classes but I do have 200$ and I really want to learn it.Any help?
Tuesday, October 26th, 2010 at
6:00 am
I want to learn to read and speak ANCIENT Greek. Yes, very much emphasis on ancient. I'm fascinated by the complexity of the individual words they used, because the definitions are so much stronger than English words.
Does any one know of a web site or some other source (that you don't have to pay for) that teaches ancient Greek? I would spend the money on it if I had it floating around but bills come first.
Any one know of something like that?
Thursday, September 9th, 2010 at
3:40 am
What variety of Ancient Greek should I learn and why?
Saturday, August 7th, 2010 at
12:28 am
I would like to learn Classical Hebrew and Ancient Greek, however I feel it is more beneficial to learn a language you can use to actually talk to people. If I were to learn their modern equivalents would a transition to their older counterparts be easy? I know that Old English and English are drastically different, I was just wondering how much these languages have evolved.
Wednesday, July 21st, 2010 at
4:07 am
I would appreciate if anyone knew the translation for the God is love in ancient greek. A friend is getting a tattoo and needs the proper translation as to not look like an idiot
Thursday, October 29th, 2009 at
6:44 pm
hello, im looking 4 quotes in ancient greek.
i mean online.
thanks
Saturday, October 3rd, 2009 at
3:05 am
I want to learn how to read ancient Greek -- specifically Attic Greek, I suppose. The most logical path would be to take a college course on the subject. Unfortunately, I cannot afford to do that. So what other options do I have? I am somewhat familiar with modern Greek from talking with my grandparents. Are there any ways I can teach myself?
Thursday, September 24th, 2009 at
12:03 am
i worden how to write Guardian and how to pronounced in ancient Greek ?
also i wanna know " Guardian Angel "
thanks you so much !!!
Thursday, September 10th, 2009 at
6:56 pm
I am doing a report for school and I need to figure out how to connect Greek (Ancient Greek) to Old English and then to English.
I think that Old English (Anglo Saxon) came from the Celts, right? So, then, how is Celtic linked to Greek?
Thanks.
I need to tie the quote "Of the thousand words we use most frequently, over 80% descend from Anglo-Saxon."
Saturday, September 5th, 2009 at
10:30 pm
Many teachers today pretend to know Greek when they don't. I am talking about pastors and ministers religious guides. I am Greek and I know that many of what they say is nonsense and lies.
I hear even "Great"teachers that talk on radio and TV that have no clue on what they say!
I can read Ancient Greek-Byzantine Greek-Modern Greek-You name it.
I am being very objective and I know that people can learn the Greek Language. But I am talking about people that don't respect the language. I hear someone say PNEUMA and pronounce it newma. You think a Greek would understand it?
As for the NSAB that Sofia and Theo's Mommy see Ephesians 5:12 the word Αισχρον is not disgraceful= it means ugly.
There are words that changed could mislead to wrong conclusions.