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List Of Greek PhrasesList of Greek Phrases/Proverbs Α (h)a - Ageōmetrētos mēdeis eisitō.
- "Let no-one without knowledge of geometry enter". Motto over the entrance to Plato's Academy (quoted in Elias' coommentary on Aristotle's Categories.
- Aei Libyē pherei ti kakon / kainon.
- "Libya always bears something evil / new", Aristotle, Historia Animailum. (Cf. Latin Ex Africa semper aliquid novi, "From Africa always something new".)
- Aei koloios para koloiōi hizanei.
- "A jackdaw is always found near a jackdaw", i.e. birds of a kind flock together.
- Atou gēras, korudou neotēs.
- "An eagle's old age (is worth) a sparrow's youth".
- Anankāi d'oude theoi makhontai.
- "Even the Gods do not fight necessity", Simonides, 8, 20.
- Anthrōpos metron.
- "Man the measure (of all things)", motto of Protagoras.
- Hapax legomenon.
- "Once said", i.e. a word that only occurs once in a text or body of literature.
- Ariston men hydōr.
- "Greatest however is water", Pindar, Olymp. 1, 1. Used as the insription over the Pump Room at Bath.
Β b - Brōma theōn.
- "Food of the gods" — allegedly said by Nero of the poisoned mushrooms with which his mother Agrippina the younger murdered Claudius.
Γ g - Glauk Athēnazde / Glauk eis Athēnas.
- "Owls to Athens", i.e. coals to Newcastle, ice to the Eskimos.
- Gnōthi seauton.
- "Know thyself" — the motto over the entrance to the temple of Apollo at Delphi.
Δ d Ε (h)e - Hen oida hoti ouden oida
- "I know one thing, that I know nothing", (Socrates in Plato's Apology)
Ζ z Η (h)ē Θ th - Thalassa kai pūr kai gunē, kaka tria.
- "Sea and fire and woman, three evils."
Ι (h)i Κ k, c - Kakou korakos kakon ōn.
- "From a bad crow, a bad egg", i.e. like father, like son.
- Kakos anr makrobios
- "A bad man lives long"
- Kallistēi
- "For the prettiest one", "To the most beautiful", from the myth of the golden apple.
Λ l Μ m - Mē genoito.
- "Let it not be!" / "Heaven forfend!" — phrase used frequently by St Paul.
Ν n Ξ x Ο (h)o - Ou phrontis Hippokleidēi.
- "Hippocleides doesn't care." From a story in Herodotus (6.129), in which Hippocleides loses the chance to marry Cleisthenes' daughter after getting drunk and dancing on his head. Herodotus says the phrase was a common expression in his own day.
Π p Ρ r(h) Σ s - Speude bradeōs.
- "Hasten slowly" (cf. Latin festina lente), "less haste, more speed".
Τ t - To gar hēdu, ean polu, ou ti ge hēdu.
- "A sweet thing tasted too often is no longer sweet."
Υ (h)u, (h)y - Hysteron proteron
- "The latter one first".
Φ ph Χ kh, ch Ψ ps Ω (h)ō See also
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