Similar words: greet, agree, agree on, agree to, disagree, agreeable, agree with, the greenhouse effect. Meaning: [griːk] n. 1. the Hellenic branch of the Indo-European family of languages 2. a native or inhabitant of Greece. adj. of or relating to or characteristic of Greece or the Greeks.
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91 The Greek tragedy "Elektra" was set to music by Richard Strauss.
92 I can recommend that new Greek restaurant. Their cooking is excellent.
93 Shopkeepers beckoned us into their premises where we were tempted by sparkling silver jewellery and traditional greek hand woven mats.
94 The two students, one Chinese, the other Greek, communicated in broken English.
95 Greek literature provides evidence for homosexual activity among both males and females.
96 According to Greek legend, it was Oedipus who solved the riddle of the Sphinx.
97 Oedipus is one of the most famous characters in Greek tragedy.
98 It may well change forever the way you look at Greek art.
99 Greek mythology holds that the gods lived on Mt. Olympus.
100 Climate was an important factor in the development of classical Greek culture.
101 What practice does the Greek church object to?
102 There are thousands of love stories in Greek Mythology.
103 The great Greek grope growers grow great Greek grapes.
103 Sentencedict.com is a sentence dictionary, on which you can find good sentences for a large number of words.
104 German banks are balking at writing off Greek debt.
105 L It is the Greek letter for L.
106 "Gnosis means 'knowledge' in Greek, " Meyer explains.
107 Despite its marvelous achivements, Greek mathematics was flawed.
108 Alexandria's population was cosmopolitan, but mainly Greek.
109 The story was a conflation of Greek myths.
110 Achilles and Heracles were ancient Greek heroes.
111 The Greek fire-dragon the Chimaera was slain at her lair but – being immortal – her blazing breath lived on.
112 Plutarch writes about an epidemic of suicide by young women in the Greek city of Miletus that was stopped by the threat that their naked corpses would be dragged through the streets.
113 A vast majority of people in Greece belong to the Greek Orthodox Church.
114 Martha C. Nussbaum, The Fragility of Goodness: Luck and Ethics in Greek Tragedy and Philosophy, ch. 6 (1986).
115 The word "dram" translates into English as "money", and is cognate with the Greek drachma.
116 Shipowner refuse as port facilities extremely poor try Panama or Greek.
117 Aristotle was born at Stagira, a Greek colony on the Macedonian coast of modern Salonica, in 384 BC.
118 Egyptian archaeologists who found the temple say it was built by Queen Berenike II, wife of Greek King Ptolemy III, who ruled Egypt from 246 to 221 B.C.
119 But though this view may find some support in the Vulgate (ii, 29), it is hardly countenanced by the Greek text.
120 Aristotle lived at the virtual cusp of the world of the autonomous city-state of the Greek polis.