Because it sounds like a bad-ass Greek Transformer.
That's the whole trouble. You can't ever find
a place that's nice and peaceful, because there isn't any.
You may think there is, but once you get there, when you're not looking,
somebody'll sneak up and write "F*ck you" right under your nose.
~ J. D. Salinger
a place that's nice and peaceful, because there isn't any.
You may think there is, but once you get there, when you're not looking,
somebody'll sneak up and write "F*ck you" right under your nose.
~ J. D. Salinger
A question related to ancient Greek words
- 16/07/2013 09:58:53 PM
1019 Views
Tom's your man for this one, I'd say, maybe Danny or Gabriel
- 16/07/2013 10:50:49 PM
812 Views
It is for fiction, yes.
- 16/07/2013 11:12:04 PM
745 Views
Re: It is for fiction, yes.
- 17/07/2013 01:17:19 AM
821 Views
That would bug the hell out of me.
- 17/07/2013 03:49:12 PM
766 Views
"Fifty years old" is πεντηκονταετης or πεντηκοντουτης
- 18/07/2013 12:20:58 PM
626 Views
If I'm converting the letters correctly ...
- 18/07/2013 04:20:49 PM
700 Views
The answer is Pentakron...
- 18/07/2013 06:02:11 PM
794 Views
If your goal is a common-use word I'd vote /pen tek/, it seems to be quick and comfortable. *NM*
- 19/07/2013 04:11:44 PM
296 Views
pentēkontaeteiron, not pentēkontaeteron
- 19/07/2013 02:40:51 AM
683 Views
This is what I would go with. Granted, at some level it becomes an issue of transliteration. *NM*
- 20/07/2013 10:13:23 AM
309 Views
