Thank you. That is a perfect answer. I can confirm this as Greek Orthodox person who is married to a Catholic; we understand that the English-spelled word "eucharist" is a transliteration of that Greek word that you have spelled in the Greek alphabet. It is a very meaningful and deep word, and points to the main purpose of both the Orthodox Divine Liturgy and the Catholic Mass which centers on The Eucharist. Here is found a fairly good definition of "transliteration": en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Transliteration
It means the "Drugstore"
In the Greek language the word ZION would be spelled Σιών.
No. They Greek language uses a different alphabet than English.
The Greek name for the city of Athens is Athena. It is spelled alpha theta eta nu alpha in the Greek alphabet.
Do you mean the name Brian? This name is not used in Greek culture. If you want a word in the Greek alphabet that sound exactly the same then the answer is: μπράιαν
The Greek alphabet was based on the Phoenician alphabet.
The Phoenician alphabet was the inspiration for the Greek alphabet.
The Cyrillic alphabet is derived from the Greek alphabet, with the addition of several characters from the Hebrew alphabet.
The Greek alphabet, an evolution of the Phoenician. An evolution of the Greek alphabet was the Latin.
These words don't translate into anything Greek, so it would be "Corey Meek." If you want to know how that would be spelled in the Greek alphabet, it would be: Κορυ Μηκ
the answer is thank you obviously
Americans use the Latin Alphabet, which was directly influenced and based on the Greek Alphabet.