Patrinos
Amicus
Peloponnesos uber alles
Posts: 4,763
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Post by Patrinos on Mar 15, 2011 5:23:26 GMT -5
"famous also in Greece "nobody knows this guy in Greece, unless they're members in Illyria forums... btw,i hope he will be ok.
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Patrinos
Amicus
Peloponnesos uber alles
Posts: 4,763
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Post by Patrinos on Mar 9, 2011 18:03:39 GMT -5
you're not Greek. I can understand it by the eyes alone. You're not very far from here.
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Patrinos
Amicus
Peloponnesos uber alles
Posts: 4,763
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Post by Patrinos on Mar 9, 2011 14:07:48 GMT -5
In the second pic he could look Greek if he hadn't that weird forehead. Thats a Greek type that looks similar, Kyrgiakos, the Livelpool guy:
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Patrinos
Amicus
Peloponnesos uber alles
Posts: 4,763
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Post by Patrinos on Mar 7, 2011 14:57:16 GMT -5
its like that it could the first time(if they are alvanoi) Albos to kill innocent people...20 years now, we know your savage nature. Does "November 17" ring a bell malaka? Also what part of "3 ethnic Greeks" didn't you understand? Now I wish the perpetrators were Albanian. Will you teach me what Greek society is experiencing the last 20 years...? Btw the members of the known gang that killed the young guys, 3 were Rossopontians( a general term for those who gained citizenship claiming Pontian heritage, most of the aren't real Pontians but Russo-Georgians...) and the 4rth member is Alvanos... Not surprising at all.
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Patrinos
Amicus
Peloponnesos uber alles
Posts: 4,763
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Post by Patrinos on Mar 6, 2011 17:11:25 GMT -5
The graphs are irrelevant in determining how long a certain people had existed. It just indicates when they appeared in books. If you look into the American Indian, for instance, they started to appear in books starting between 1550 and 1600, but they had existed for a very long time before. people in Europe and especially in Balkans were easily noticed... they weren't beyond Atlantic...
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Patrinos
Amicus
Peloponnesos uber alles
Posts: 4,763
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Post by Patrinos on Mar 4, 2011 17:51:55 GMT -5
Patrine, you need to import some Montenegrins to get rid of your Albanian problem...we have experience in such procedures ;D don't need to... we have our way...:
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Patrinos
Amicus
Peloponnesos uber alles
Posts: 4,763
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Post by Patrinos on Mar 4, 2011 17:15:37 GMT -5
its like that it could the first time(if they are alvanoi) Albos to kill innocent people...20 years now, we know your savage nature.
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Patrinos
Amicus
Peloponnesos uber alles
Posts: 4,763
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Post by Patrinos on Mar 4, 2011 16:57:00 GMT -5
This guy had mental health problems and what he did wont change nothing, Albanians still are the most pro American country in world . both the action of the...Arif, and what you posted above is the proof that you are the most pathetic country in the world!
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Patrinos
Amicus
Peloponnesos uber alles
Posts: 4,763
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Post by Patrinos on Mar 4, 2011 16:28:51 GMT -5
Kastrioti was Greek, wasn't he? i don't know. i speak about the surname that bear thousands of Greek today.
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Patrinos
Amicus
Peloponnesos uber alles
Posts: 4,763
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Post by Patrinos on Mar 4, 2011 16:20:28 GMT -5
Can someone explain to me what is mean in Greek surnames like Karipidis, Dokaris, Pallkaris, and Boletivaris? Are these from Crete as well? Also is Zotis Albanian? I will give you the answers you want after you etymologize the surname Kastrioti.
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Patrinos
Amicus
Peloponnesos uber alles
Posts: 4,763
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Post by Patrinos on Mar 4, 2011 15:32:21 GMT -5
i bet that in his village he would become a mujahedin hero....much pilaf and honey up there with Allah...
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Patrinos
Amicus
Peloponnesos uber alles
Posts: 4,763
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Post by Patrinos on Mar 4, 2011 15:01:32 GMT -5
I was just wondering whether or not it's possible to track someone's Greek origins down only by a family name, or maybe a tribe name? Short answer : No. Majority of people can barely trace their roots pre-1900. A minority can trace their roots back to 1800s, but that's the best you can get. Surnames, toponyms are still a mystery in Greece. In my village, (and the majority of mainland Greece), 9/10 of the surnames dont mean a thing in Greek. pyrrcko... lets make a test. What do the surnames Goulas, Thraskias, Noutsos, Krokas, Lontos, Lolos mean? to inform you, they're are Greek creations.
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Patrinos
Amicus
Peloponnesos uber alles
Posts: 4,763
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Post by Patrinos on Mar 4, 2011 6:14:40 GMT -5
well, very roughly we can say that those who have surnames ending in -akis are from Crete, -akos from eastern Mani, -eas from western Mani, -opoulos from Peloponnese, -ousis from Tsakonia and Chios, -oulias from south Achaia, -oudis from Macedonia/Thrace, -idis from Pontos and Minor Asia, -oglou from Konstantinoupolis, -atos Kephalonia, -elis from Lemnos and Smyrna, -ou(like Georgiou) from Cyprus, -iotis/-itis/-atis from where the prefix shows(e.g. Veriotis from Veria, Smyrniotis from Smyrna etc), -antis from Pontos(Ypsilantis comes from the village Ypsila(high place) etc etc Do you have any surname in mind, that you want to know where it comes from? Thank you so much, Patrinos, I was hoping for an overview like this one . And yes, I do, actually. It's Panagoulas or Panagoulias...what's the difference between those two names? Is it only because of different pronounciations that some have chosen to leave out or add and 'i' to, for instance, the above mentioned name? Panagoulias could be from everywhere in mainland Greece.But I give more chances to be from Peloponnesos, or Epiros. If its -oulas I give more chances that it comes from Thessaly. -oulas or -oulias are dimunitive suffixes that are used for surnames. Skiporex... why you ask? do you like the mouni of Stefanidou?
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Patrinos
Amicus
Peloponnesos uber alles
Posts: 4,763
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Post by Patrinos on Mar 3, 2011 11:22:30 GMT -5
While in Jannina be like a Janniotis...
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Patrinos
Amicus
Peloponnesos uber alles
Posts: 4,763
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Post by Patrinos on Mar 3, 2011 5:57:05 GMT -5
whats the date of the next pogrom?
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Patrinos
Amicus
Peloponnesos uber alles
Posts: 4,763
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Post by Patrinos on Mar 2, 2011 16:53:44 GMT -5
That is quite fuked that her image was spread around the web like that. She went to my school, that was one of the pics from her year study at Selanik university where is she from? turk? arnavud? Well actually it isn't that embarrasing. At least in Greek eyes its a tradition in Tirnavos karnival every year. I'm pretty sure that the protestant and catholic puritans of the West can't stand see or participate in that kind of aristophanic-dionysiaka-phalic events... the pic is from flickr, just press tirnavos.
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Patrinos
Amicus
Peloponnesos uber alles
Posts: 4,763
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Post by Patrinos on Mar 2, 2011 16:25:58 GMT -5
i hacked your pc.
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Patrinos
Amicus
Peloponnesos uber alles
Posts: 4,763
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Post by Patrinos on Mar 2, 2011 15:01:32 GMT -5
a traditional apokriatiko/carnical song from Roumeli... those who knows Greek can enjoy the beautiful lyrics... Its a dialogue between the dicck and the balls about if the first can fucck the 40 p**iss around, and the latter respond that yes he can but he shall let them get a bit inside... ;D ;D ;D its hilarious when you hear that kind of songs these days by 80 y.o. ladies and old men... These days in Greek country that kind of satyrical "shocking" songs are sang, with dick$, balls, pushies, fuccks, etc... ;D lol
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Patrinos
Amicus
Peloponnesos uber alles
Posts: 4,763
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Post by Patrinos on Mar 2, 2011 5:30:54 GMT -5
do all these take their loans from Alpha Bank?
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Patrinos
Amicus
Peloponnesos uber alles
Posts: 4,763
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Post by Patrinos on Feb 26, 2011 17:56:31 GMT -5
So the Serbian flag, essentially came from Byzantine as well ? The double headed eagle symbol, yes. The colours and the three streeps obviously not. Also the symbol with the cross with the four B(eta) on the four angles comes from the era. Here is a 13th century Greek manuscript depicting Greek troops(actually anachronistically it depicts Alexander the Great); E.g. That is the spot where the last Emperor was crowned in Mystras, Peloponnesos :
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