weboh wrote:
Pronounced Par-ee-sheh. Sigma is a soft sh s-sound, and Phi is actually a hard p-sound.

weboh, I cannot claim much expertise in the Greek language, other than knowing the Greek alphabet and a few words and expressions, so I asked a native-born Greek friend about what you wrote.  My Greek friend disputes your contentions.  First of all, the Greek language doesn't have the "sh" sound, which is evidenced by the fact that whenever there is a Greek transliteration of a Hebrew word that contains the letter שׁ (SHIN - the "sh" sound), the usual Greek substitute is the letter Σ/σ (sigma).  Secondly, the letter Φ/φ (phi) is pronounced with the "ph"/"f" sound, whereas the letter Π/π (pi) is pronounced with the "p" sound.

UriYosef

Our raison d'être:

WHOSOEVER DESTROYS A SINGLE SOUL OF ISRAEL, SCRIPTURE IMPUTES [GUILT] TO HIM AS THOUGH HE HAD DESTROYED A COMPLETE WORLD; AND WHOSOEVER PRESERVES A SINGLE SOUL OF ISRAEL, SCRIPTURE ASCRIBES [MERIT] TO HIM AS THOUGH HE HAD PRESERVED A COMPLETE WORLD. (Babylonian Talmud, Tractate Sanhedrin, 37a)

The fruits of our effort:

The battle against spiritual terrorism is being won, one soul at a time!!!