And even if you only think of one of them there are 9 synth engines ... luckily that's easy (or shall we call it enginos or enginea ?)Subpar wrote:Freakin hillarious!!!RichF wrote:To be honest, I'm still up in the air on the pluralization. Sometimes it's Kronii, sometimes it Kronoses, sometimes it's Kronos, sometimes it's "Kronos units."
In general, I try to talk about only one of them at a time to avoid confusion.
-Rich
KRONOS OWNERS :-) Are you Stage or Studio based?
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- madbeatzyo111
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But are proper names pluralized in the same fashion in old Greek? Because n modern English they are usually not; for example "Amy" does not become "Amies," even though "army" becomes "armies."jimknopf wrote: Hope not to to sound like some smart alec, but I happen to know old Greek, and there the plural of masculine words with -os at the end is -oi. So the correct plural would be "Kronoi".
Call it like you like
Felsineus brings up a good point though. Kronos is a god and as such there can only be one formal entity--as in the modern Christian "God." However to reconcile the many units out there, I would submit that just like the concept of the Holy Trinity, each individual element can be seen as part of the whole and ALL parts are ultimately one God--or Kronos.
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Now that my interest is fully piqued, here is part of a discussion regarding "Eos" as the name of the VW car.
Besides which, the ancient Greek would never have pluralized Kronos, so the word Kronoi would not exist in the vocabulary in the first place.
(http://ask.metafilter.com/49269/An-idle ... bout-Greek)This is an irregular noun - not, for example, a second declension (-os) noun which would automatically take the nominative plural ending of -oi. Thus the form which some have suggested, ἠοῖ (êoi), is not the plural here...
Besides which, the ancient Greek would never have pluralized Kronos, so the word Kronoi would not exist in the vocabulary in the first place.
- iixorbiusii
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Somewhat of a digression... but as I started this thread, then I guess it's my prerogative
Maybe as forum members we should run a thread "what should the plural of Kronos be known as furthermore". We could take suggestions for a few weeks, and then collate them into a poll and let "the people" decide which one they prefer !
My own personal grammatically-incorrect suggestion, which started off this discussion, is "Kron-i"
Cheers.
iix.

Maybe as forum members we should run a thread "what should the plural of Kronos be known as furthermore". We could take suggestions for a few weeks, and then collate them into a poll and let "the people" decide which one they prefer !
My own personal grammatically-incorrect suggestion, which started off this discussion, is "Kron-i"
Cheers.
iix.
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