static_ice wrote:sorry what should I call you? muty?
Call me Iliad
I swear it's meant to be Illiad, but I've also seen Iliad before.
You guys don't know why Iliad is my username. It's extremely close to my real name.
is your real name 'giliad' with a silent 'g'
nope. Remove a letter in my name and you will have the phonetic sound the same as my name. Change one letter which is nearly the exact same and you will have my name
static_ice wrote:sorry what should I call you? muty?
Call me Iliad
I swear it's meant to be Illiad, but I've also seen Iliad before.
You guys don't know why Iliad is my username. It's extremely close to my real name.
is your real name 'giliad' with a silent 'g'
nope. Remove a letter in my name and you will have the phonetic sound the same as my name. Change one letter which is nearly the exact same and you will have my name
or you could stop the bollocks and just tell us your name
The Iliad (Greek Ἰλιάς, Iliás) is, together with the Odyssey, one of two ancient Greek epic poems attributed to Homer, supposedly a blind Ionian poet. Most modern scholars consider the epics to be the oldest literature in the Greek language, possibly equalled by Hesiod, dated to the 8th or 7th century BC.
The poem concerns events during the tenth and final year in the siege of the city of Ilion, or Troy, by the Greeks (See Trojan War). The word "Iliad" means "pertaining to Ilion" (in Latin, Ilium), the city proper, as opposed to Troy (in Greek, Τροία, Troía; in Latin, Troia), the state centered around Ilium, over which Priam reigned. The names "Ilium" and "Troy" are often used interchangeably.
firth4eva wrote:The Iliad (Greek Ἰλιάς, Iliás) is, together with the Odyssey, one of two ancient Greek epic poems attributed to Homer, supposedly a blind Ionian poet. Most modern scholars consider the epics to be the oldest literature in the Greek language, possibly equalled by Hesiod, dated to the 8th or 7th century BC.
The poem concerns events during the tenth and final year in the siege of the city of Ilion, or Troy, by the Greeks (See Trojan War). The word "Iliad" means "pertaining to Ilion" (in Latin, Ilium), the city proper, as opposed to Troy (in Greek, Τροία, Troía; in Latin, Troia), the state centered around Ilium, over which Priam reigned. The names "Ilium" and "Troy" are often used interchangeably.