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Announcing new DTI novella and Rise of the Federation 3 & 4!

A quick question, Christopher. How have you been pronouncing the title "Basileus" out loud in English/Federation Standard? I ask because I found out from reading about the Greek language on Wikipedia that modern Greek speakers pronounce "βασιλεύς" like "vah-see-lehfs".
 
A quick question, Christopher. How have you been pronouncing the title "Basileus" out loud in English/Federation Standard? I ask because I found out from reading about the Greek language on Wikipedia that modern Greek speakers pronounce "βασιλεύς" like "vah-see-lehfs".

The ancient Greek pronounces it the same way as Christopher.
 
^I've been pronouncing it in my head as "bass-ih-lay-us" (bass as in fish). Rhymes with "Amadeus" or 'Dr. Zaius." Wiktionary agrees.
Gotcha. Thanks, Christopher.
A quick question, Christopher. How have you been pronouncing the title "Basileus" out loud in English/Federation Standard? I ask because I found out from reading about the Greek language on Wikipedia that modern Greek speakers pronounce "βασιλεύς" like "vah-see-lehfs".

The ancient Greek pronounces it the same way as Christopher.
Not exactly. The ancient Greek pronounciation of "βασιλεύς" is somewhat like "bah-see-lay(-)oos". The hyphen in parentheses indicating that "εύ" has a semivowel as in the modern Spanish pronunciation of Europe/Europa.
 
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Not exactly. The ancient Greek pronounciation of "βασιλεύς" is somewhat like "bah-see-lay(-)oos". The hyphen in parentheses indicating that "εύ" has a semivowel as in the modern Spanish pronunciation of Europe/Europa.

Yeah, you're right - I read "us" in my head as "oos" for some reason
 
The blurb for The Collectors is now up on The Trek Collective.
An all-new Star Trek e-novella featuring the Department of Temporal Investigations!

The dedicated agents of the Federation Department of Temporal Investigations have their work cut out for them protecting the course of history from the dangers of time travel. But the galaxy is littered with artifacts that, in the wrong hands, could threaten reality. One of the DTI's most crucial jobs is to track down these objects and lock them safely away in the Federation’s most secret and secure facility. When Agents Lucsly and Dulmur bring home an alien obelisk of incredible power, they are challenged by a 31st-century temporal agent who insists they surrender the mysterious artifact to her. But before they know it, the three agents are pulled into a corrupted future torn apart by a violent temporal war. While their DTI colleagues attempt to track them down, Lucsly and Dulmur must restore temporal peace by setting off on an epic journey through the ages, with the future of the galaxy hanging in the balance...
Woah. For an e-novella, it sounds fantastic.
 
This sounds great, and I love the cover. I'm glad to see them sticking with the clock design. I always like it when series stick to a distinct cover style like that.
 
I just got The Collectors and I see in the historian's note that it's set between the 2nd and 3rd books in the Cold Equations trilogy. Does it presuppose anything from books published after Cold Equations? I'm only two books into The Fall, but I'd like to pause and read this book now if I can (Christopher is my favorite of the current ST novelists, so I don't want to wait to read this if I don't have to).
 
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