Phaeton Helios sounds so wrong, like, you don’t call Scorpian variants by it’s variant first. It’s not a Scorpian Oni.
Helios Phaeton sounds so much better. Why’d you guys reverse the wording?
Phaeton Helios sounds so wrong, like, you don’t call Scorpian variants by it’s variant first. It’s not a Scorpian Oni.
Helios Phaeton sounds so much better. Why’d you guys reverse the wording?
What about the Banshee Ultra?
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> What about the Banshee Ultra?
Lol I call it Ultra Banshee
> 2533274974081836;2:
> What about the Banshee Ultra?
Shh!!! Your ruining his complaining.
I get what the OP means. Everyone uses adjectives before the nouns in the English language. An example might be “Smart Kid” or “Young Thug”.
With the phaeton, helios is a weird word and doesn’t flow well especially when you put phaeton after it. Thus creating the Phaeton Helios.
Phaeton and Helios are Ancient Greek nouns, not English. I do believe that in ancient Greek the word order was a lot looser than in English so presumably while Helios Phaeton is grammatically correct English, Phaeton Helios may be correct in Ancient Greek. Many of the languages use noun-adjective rather than adjective-noun (so car green instead of green car)
Phaeton was the son of Helios in Greek Mythology btw, just to make this more awkward.
So if he was the son, wouldn’t you out a fathers name before a sons?
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> > 2533274974081836;2:
> > What about the Banshee Ultra?
>
>
> Shh!!! Your ruining his complaining.

Phaeton Helios sounds good to me… The Banshee Ultra example is a good one as well, but there are many other occasions where a defining word goes after the main one. For example : Elite Zealot, Grunt Heavy, Knight Bannerman, etc.
I never thought of Helios as a type of Phaeton. I thought of it as the name of the Phaeton.
> 2533274891841289;4:
> > 2533274974081836;2:
> > What about the Banshee Ultra?
>
>
> Shh!!! Your ruining his complaining.
lol, thats smart, typical English language
who cares about the name? that helios is so damn good!