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So you cannot substantiate your assertion that
"Antenna/e" is originally a Greek word? "Richard Clark" wrote in message ... On Sat, 25 Dec 2004 19:51:47 -0000, "Airy R. Bean" wrote: So you cannot substantiate your assertion. Most Greek words that I have encountered can be expressed phonetically in English. Sounds like rhetoric in place of argument. As I said, the original Greek is found in the OED - if, of course, you speak from its authority and you have access, otherwise your response is called "winging it" (vulgar US colloq. ca. 20th cent.) ;-) The Greek (this is from the OED by the way) was translated by Theodosius, the Monophysite monk (d. 1478 Gaza). By the way, for English there is no earlier usage of Antenna|e than 1698. From Weekly: "Greek is recorded, in the Homeric poems, from the 7th century B.C. It was divided into a number of dialects - Ionic, Doric, Aeolic, Attic - the last of which eventually prevailed and still exists, not greatly changed, as Modern Greek. Its direct contribution to English does not begin till the Renaissance, but the coinage of scientific and philosophical terms of Greek origin is now continuous." 73's Richard Clark, KB7QHC |
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