That's not very clear because if it's just bishops I read it's actually 'enepiscopos' (not 'niepiscopos') and if it's just metropolitans it's just 'emmetropoliteees' (not 'ni metropolitees').
I understand that pi is singular and ni is plural, but as you can see from the above, it's a bit confusing, so can you please directly answer the 3 questions in my previous post? Thanks.
Em is an article for the second noun following the one prior so after naniodi you'd put em for metropolitan s or en for bishops and the rest of the sentence is using either the plural or the singular. This will always imply the plural of the first noun in any case because naniodi is plural. Tell me if I am still not clear because typing from the mobile is really such a hard work..
@ophadece I have no idea what you look like, but sometimes I pronounce things in the Old Bohairic way, and I think of you and laugh. You're a fanatic, but the good kind
If God is absolute, why are there still people int his world that don't believe in Him?! Why do people need to have faith if the evidence is absolute and undeniably there?
If Christianity is absolute, we would rot in Hell after we die and we would never think of salvation being granted from God.
If God's justice is absolute, we wouldn't even be alive after the fall.
If God's mercy is absolute, we wouldn't be on earth but still in Paradise and enjoying it.
I think you just answered yourself in your last two statements. God cannot be a relativist. Unfortunately some of the church figures are and that's not healthy..
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And if it's only bishops it's 'enepiscopos'?
And if it's one metropolitan and one bishop it's 'nem nenioti emmetropolitees nem pi episcopos'?
That's not very clear because if it's just bishops I read it's actually 'enepiscopos' (not 'niepiscopos') and if it's just metropolitans it's just 'emmetropoliteees' (not 'ni metropolitees').
I understand that pi is singular and ni is plural, but as you can see from the above, it's a bit confusing, so can you please directly answer the 3 questions in my previous post? Thanks.
That's clear. So one metropolitan and many bishops = 'nem peniot emmetropolitees nem ni episcopos nee etkee neman'?
Thanks @ophadece