ArgosNiko

92 posts

ArgosNiko

ArgosNiko

@ArgosNiko

no novels

Beigetreten Mayıs 2026
2 Folgt18 Follower
ArgosNiko
ArgosNiko@ArgosNiko·
@Eridiongido it sacrifices the entire aesthetic of the space, while also being cheap and artificial by comparison
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Ree
Ree@Eridiongido·
@ArgosNiko 😂 kindly state your reasons
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Ree
Ree@Eridiongido·
Everyone hated the Louvre Pyramid at first. Putting a modern glass structure next to a 12th-century palace felt like a crime. ​But the architect did his homework. He matched its slope perfectly to the surrounding roofs using ancient Greek math rules.
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Abuja, Nigeria 🇳🇬 English
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ArgosNiko
ArgosNiko@ArgosNiko·
@GilbertCTweets its not from thermotita (θερμότητα). that's Modern Greek. it's from thermos (θερμός) "warm, hot, boiling, glowing"
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Immanuel Kant | Pure Reason & Morality
Even philosophers will praise war as ennobling mankind, forgetting the Greek who said: War is bad in that it begets more evil than it kills.
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ArgosNiko
ArgosNiko@ArgosNiko·
@frozaut in Ovid his body disappears. they use the flower as a substitute: croecum pro corpore florem inveniunt foliis medium cingentibus albis
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Anne
Anne@frozaut·
Waterhouse’s ‘Narcissus’ references the flower named after the Greek myth. ​ In the Greek myth Narcissus, a beautiful youth, fell deeply in love with his own reflection in a pool of water. He became completely entranced and could not tear himself away. He eventually wasted away and died on the spot from starvation and exhaustion. In some versions (e.g., Ovid’s Metamorphoses), the gods transformed his body into the narcissus flower (daffodil) where he died, as a memorial to his self-obsession. In others, the flower simply sprang up from the earth at the place of his death. The bloom thus symbolizes vanity, self-love, and unrequited desire.
John William Waterhouse@waterhouse_art

Narcissus #artbots #waterhouse

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JusticeForCyprus
JusticeForCyprus@GeorgeGunner424·
@doctor_rahmeh Stolen Properties of Greek Cypriots have been sold for the last 50 years, any care to mention ? i thought not.
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Ixabert
Ixabert@LordIxabert·
@ArgosNiko That certainly convinced me of nothing whatever.
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Ixabert
Ixabert@LordIxabert·
If a man is unversed in Latin & Greek, he is, in the strict sense of the term (do look it up), an ILLITERATE. I say that not in any spirit of moral judgment, but as a matter of accurate classification. He may be clever, or even wise, but he remains an uneducated barbarian.
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ArgosNiko
ArgosNiko@ArgosNiko·
@LordIxabert ..but i think you actually said Greek and Latin. oops. also conventional usage does not 'strictly' determine a word's meaning. etymology is better for this. as im sure you know, the word literate most literally means lettered, without reference to a specific language
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ArgosNiko
ArgosNiko@ArgosNiko·
@Pastpassport there is so much wrong here. im comforted knowing it was written by ai
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Joseph Pickett
Joseph Pickett@Pastpassport·
Homer wrote nothing. His epics lived in the mouths of performers for centuries before anyone wrote them down. Byzantine scholars in Constantinople kept copying them when the entire West had forgotten Greek existed. No copies. No Keats. No Odyssey film opening July 17.
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Joseph Pickett
Joseph Pickett@Pastpassport·
Everyone thinks Rome's fall destroyed the ancient world's great books. Wrong. Most were already gone before a single barbarian crossed the border. Nine survived because of people you've never heard of. 🧵
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ArgosNiko
ArgosNiko@ArgosNiko·
Matthew Arnold. "Study of Celtic Literature" (1867)
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ArgosNiko
ArgosNiko@ArgosNiko·
@johnhboyer if you are getting your texts from Perseus, just be aware that they claim copyright on them as digital assets
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ArgosNiko
ArgosNiko@ArgosNiko·
@BBHerodotus pretty sure most universities have the Harvard Classics and the Bible. along with thousands of other resources. you could literally learn the languages the Harvard Classics translate from. ill take the 10 years please
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Barbarian Herodotus
Barbarian Herodotus@BBHerodotus·
I’m of the opinion that a young man could lock himself away in a tower for a year with the five foot shelf of Harvard Classics and a good Bible, and would re-emerge a better man than had he spent a decade in a modern university.
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ArgosNiko
ArgosNiko@ArgosNiko·
@euromaximal not only does it not lift them out. it keeps them in
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EuroMaximalist 🇪🇺
EuroMaximalist 🇪🇺@euromaximal·
Tourism doesn’t lift countries out of poverty. It never has. All it does is keep them trapped in a loop of mediocrity, low-value activities and chronic inability to produce anything of value. It also reduces housing availability, making it more expensive for native populations.
Gunther Fehlinger-Jahn@GunterFehlinger

Yes to high quality tourism development for Albania This is the way to lift Albania from poverty to EU prosperity

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ArgosNiko
ArgosNiko@ArgosNiko·
Greek orphanage at Prinkipos. The largest wooden building in Europe. Now abandoned
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Ulfcytel
Ulfcytel@ulfcytel·
Me and the Wife built this writing desk. I proclaim this to you, I will write more articles and work on a solid book for you
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Evren Sener
Evren Sener@EvrenSAuthor·
Romans=\ Greek/Hellenes This is a basic claim in Byzantine identity studies. Many medieval Romans were Greek-speaking, yes. But their primary self-designation was Romaioi, Romans. Greek-speaking Roman does not automatically mean “Greek” as an ethnic identity. Roman identity in Byzantium was imperial, political, religious, cultural, and legal. It cannot simply be collapsed into one ethnic label. Reference List Kaldellis, A. (2007) Hellenism in Byzantium: The Transformations of Greek Identity and the Reception of the Classical Tradition. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. Kaplanis, T.A. (2014) ‘Antique Names and Self-Identification: Hellenes, Graikoi, and Romaioi from Late Byzantium to the Greek Nation-State’, in Tziovas, D. (ed.) Re-imagining the Past: Antiquity and Modern Greek Culture. Oxford: Oxford University Press, pp. 80–97. doi:10.1093/acprof:oso/9780199672752.003.0005. Stouraitis, I. (2014) ‘Roman identity in Byzantium: a critical approach’, Byzantinische Zeitschrift, 107(1), pp. 175–220. doi:10.1515/bz-2014-0009. Theodoropoulos, P. (2021) ‘Did the Byzantines call themselves Byzantines? Elements of Eastern Roman identity in the imperial discourse of the seventh century’, Byzantine and Modern Greek Studies, 45(1), pp. 1–13. doi:10.1017/byz.2020.25.
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jenni
jenni@leslivresss·
livre madame bovary
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ArgosNiko
ArgosNiko@ArgosNiko·
@trottskyathome any "best author" list with shakespeare at the top was made by someone who knows only english and who didn't read much after highschool drama club
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Jay Trott
Jay Trott@trottskyathome·
Any "best author" list that doesn't have Shakespeare at the top is questionable. Any that doesn't have him in the top 10 is probably political.
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