Greek as an adjective, such as 'a Greek person' or 'Greek music', is 'Ellinikos/Elliniko/Elliniki' (masc/neut/fem depending on gender of noun). However, the language is called 'Ellinika', so if you want to ask if someone speaks Greek, you would ask 'mila Ellinika?'
ήδη εδώ (idi edo)
ΕΓΚΥΟΣ (pronounced: EGGYOS). You may see some EGG here...
Here it is!Πώς να πω jedi
Yes, this sentence is grammatically correct. Here are some examples:You went to the water park on Monday with your friend Joey.I went to the water park on Monday with my friends.
You have to talk to dripp who is in the corner and say that you are not here to play, then say you need clean water. Then talk to bubble and say you have the water. Hope this helps!
I looked it up in google translate so here it is. ( u may have to copy and paste!)αρχείο
Archaios is not an English word, it is Greek. Here is what the Related Link (below) has to say about it: "Our word 'archaic' derives from the Greek archaios, meaning simply 'old' or 'ancient.'"
how do you say unite in greek
You say her in a sentence like: I saw her at the park (instead of I saw Ellie May at the park).You say she in a sentence like: She saw me at the park, or She went to the park today.
Much better if you will just say car-park instead of park of car. It's kinda awkward when you say that and it's not right.
You can say athlete in Greek by saying athlitis. If you wanted to say the word sports in Greek it would be athlitismos.