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Strategos

Strategos, plural strategoi, (; Doric Greek: στραταγός, stratagos; literally meaning "army leader") is used in Greek to mean military general. In the Hellenistic world and the Byzantine Empire the term was also used to describe a military governor. In the modern Hellenic Army it is the highest officer rank.

Usage examples of "strategos".

He asked his secretary to summon the Strategos, his adviser, and sat down, turning the tiny object in his fingers.

She was still warm with relief as she followed the Strategos out onto the ringing echoes of a covered metal walkway.

It was only then that Zephyr realized - with her sketchy knowledge of the roots of the Greek-based Citizen Classnames - that of course Strategos was a blend-word, the old name for a general, now carrying the new weight of later derivations: strategic adviser, battle tactician, master planner.

The Strategos gestured with his finger, and a line of light radiated from it and traced a pointer on the glass above them.

The Strategos was holding his in one hand, she noticed as they approached one another.

Zephyr was thinking about the not-unhandsome Strategos Anthony now, wondering who he was meeting, where and what they were doing.

The Strategos was waiting for her as he had promised, his uniform immaculate, his copper Tek gleaming in the soft light.

Even the Strategos had not acknowledged her, although she was the best mind of any of them.

We cannot do as the Strategos asks us to do, if we remain as we are now.

He a retired Strategos, a paratrooper four times decorated, while her military service had been with the Security Directorate.

The Strategos continued his methodical labors, with a detachment which was certainly an effective demoralizer for the officer on the carpet before him.

The scored eagle face of the strategos did not alter, but his fingers clutched on the mahogany ferrule of his cane.

The First Strategos of Chaka Home has to drill with his militia company every week.

They would have kept the number of plotters as small as possible -- perhaps only the triumvirate of Hegemon, Strategos, and Polemarch and maybe a few people here at Battle School.

Thus the Polemarch and the Strategos had far more money at their disposal than the Hegemon, which made him, though first in title, weakest in actual power and independence of movement.