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It's all Greeks to Me
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We had a game once upon a time where we catalogued the names of some of the lesser-known Knights of the Round Table, such as Sir Kit Breaker, Sir Gycal Truss, Sir Monon de Mounte and so forth. I thought it might be educational to go further back, to Greek times, and list a few of them. John Cleese, Androcles and Pericles may be quite well-known, but what about the tailors Euripides and Eumenides, for example? Extra points will be given for providing some biographical details on these long-forgotten fellows.

(Winning move unaltered.)

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Oddly enough, given the introduction to the game, Sircles was both a Greek geometer and a Knight of the Round Table.
No one ever seems to talk about Cockites, wife of Pythagoras, who first inspired then later enthusiastically participated in the human-scale demonstrations that unequivocally established the mathematician’s most famous theorem.
Cockneys - Reached London long before the Romans.
"There is nothing on earth to be more prized than a hefty discount from a good friend." (From "On the nature of friendship", Matesrates, 214-152 B.C.)
Standatease was the forerunner of generations of seargent-majors.
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