Nasdaq: Genius Group files Federal Securities Class Action Lawsuit against Citadel Securities and Virtu Financial for Alleged Market Manipulation.
Genius Group files Federal Securities Class Action Lawsuit against Citadel Securities and Virtu Financial for Alleged Market Manipulation.
Seeking Alpha: Genius Group files RICO lawsuit against Michael Moe and Peter Ritz, seeks over $450 million in damages
Genius Group files RICO lawsuit against Michael Moe and Peter Ritz, seeks over $450 million in damages
MSN: Genius Group Files Lawsuit Against Citadel and Virtu for Market Manipulation
The Globe and Mail: Genius Group Files Form 6-K After March Earnings Call
Seeking Alpha: Genius Group files Federal Securities Class Action Lawsuit against Citadel Securities and Virtu Financial for Alleged Market Manipulation.
My answer always included the qualification that "genii" is limited to a particular meaning of "genius". If you use the word to mean "an intelligent person" then the plural can only be "geniuses".
grammar - What is the plural of the word "genius"? - English Language ...
Genius is the correct spelling that comes directly from Latin: word-forming element making adjectives from nouns, meaning "having, full of, having to do with, doing, inclined to," from Old French -ous, -eux, from Latin -osus.
Why is "genius" often misspelt as "geniOus"? What are its etymons ...
On the surface, one might think that ingenious is somehow based on the word genius. Interestingly, this is not true. The word ingenious does not actually have the in- prefix for negation. Instead, it comes originally from the Latin ingeniōsus, which means "intellectual, talented, ingenious". At times in history it was also spelled "engenious". Indeed, ingeniōsus appears to be the same root ...