But I'll stick by my point. As demonstrated here (aside from you), no one could reference his name. I even got "Tetragammon" as a name of God. :)That was "Tetragrammaton", IIRC (in a post by Don "Silverlock" Richards?).
And, if you try to recall your basic Greek -- no Classical studies required! Just chemistry and geometry -- "tetra" means "four". And a "grammat-on" (or "gramma-ton"?), couldn't that be like an electr-on or positr-on, a "smallest element" of something...? Of "Grammar", or speech, perhaps? My guess is, it means "letter".
Don't look down on everybody else *quite* so much, please, Khas: The term looked familiar to me too, and thinking about it for a bit and coming to the conclusion that it probably means "the four letters", it seems reasonable to me to assume that it is a reference to 'YHWH' (or 'JHVH', or whatever) -- it *is*, too!, the name of god. Well, *a* name of god. :-)
(Yup, still the Christian god -- 't'was His Bible what was written in Greek.)
Now go grovel to Don (if it was him) a bit!