natos
Hello Chris. So it's a nu, not a gamma.
I wonder if "natos" is like the Latin "natus"--born?
Cheers.
LC
Help please, what does this say?
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I have enlisted the help of a friend who was brought up in the Greek community of Baltimore. Dino got back to me with the following information:
"the first word is natos - perhaps short for thanatos - death. i'll work on it and get back you on it."
Chris
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Latin script
Hello Chris. Well, if he is mixing Latin script with the Greek, it could be "vatos."
Cheers.
LC
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The first word could be gamos - marriage - if the third letter were read as a mu, though it doesn't look much like one.
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Originally posted by ChrisGeorge View PostI'm curious about the long snaking line that stretches from the ending upper case sigma to fit between "Roslyn" and "D'Onston" as if the Greek is an insertion to go after "Roslyn."
Chris
Evilina, I also checked it wasn't something from another page, but I think that the sign I've been talking about at the end of the wording shows that it was meant to be there as it goes up from the end of the word and into the signature.
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Originally posted by lynn cates View PostHello Chris. Now that DOES look like an integration sign!
Cheers.
LC
Originally posted by lynn cates View PostHello again, Chris. I say, if my conjecture of omicron, epsilon is a dipthong, and the pi turns out to be an ill formed rho followed closely by tau, then perhaps it would be roberts after all.
This would be perfect for one possessing an ego like D'Onstons.
Cheers.
LC
Chris
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dipthong
Hello again, Chris. I say, if my conjecture of omicron, epsilon is a dipthong, and the pi turns out to be an ill formed rho followed closely by tau, then perhaps it would be roberts after all.
This would be perfect for one possessing an ego like D'Onstons.
Cheers.
LC
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integration
Hello Chris. Now that DOES look like an integration sign!
Cheers.
LC
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I thought at first it might be "Robert" in Greek but that would be Ροβερτ
From WikiAnswers
I'm curious about the long snaking line that stretches from the ending upper case sigma to fit between "Roslyn" and "D'Onston" as if the Greek is an insertion to go after "Roslyn."
Chris
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nu alpha gamma (or tau) nu (or upsilon) sigma
rho omega beta ? tau gamma sigma???????????????????
I don't know what it says, but i did have a look at the image on ancestry to see if that made it any clearer (I was actually looking for any other similar markings or if it was an error that had come through from a facing page). It didn't help, but i did notice that Anne, the wife, wrote her name under the line for it, so do we think that whatever it is, it was written by Stephenson himself, before she did (so she didn't have room to put her name where it should be)?Last edited by evilina; 10-08-2009, 03:49 PM.
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summation
Hello Debra. Well, it does look like the mathematical sign for summation (or the sum function). Of course, that would be identical to the Greek upper case sigma.
The integration sign (at least as employed in the Leibnizian notation [not the Newtonian]) is an elongated "s."
Cheers.
LC
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Hi Lynn, thanks for that.
I see something simialr too, those are roughly the ones I have picked out as well.
I also see the the mathematical sign for integration at the end....not too sure about that one though.
No silly Ripper theories here...just wondering what sort of person would add something like this underneath their wedding signature, and what it might mean.
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Greek to me
Hello Debra. It does indeed bear a superficial resemblance to Greek If so, it looks like:
gamma, alpha, tau, omicron, (lower case terminal) sigma.
Next word:
rho, omega, beta, omicron, epsilon (this one is a stretch), pi, (upper case) sigma. (Why upper case?)
gatos? roboeps?
I'd better stop there as we have enough silly ripper theories already. I hope no one claims this as Greek for "catch me when you can."
Cheers.
LC
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Cheers Monty, anything you can find out on this would be great.
I was thinking Greek as I thought I recognised several greek alphabet characters.
The first word in particular (as I think it is two words) looks like it ends with the two different lower case versions of sigma, the last only for use at the end of a word I believe.
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