Citations:epsila


 * 1829, Juan Bautista de Erro y Azpiroz (author), George William Erving (translator), The Alphabet of the Primitive Language of Spain, page 29
 * The Greeks substituted the psi, for the tsi, and so made of the basque etsila, epsila, or epsilon, by means of the Greek termination on.*
 * * The author here observes in a note, that the name of this letter, more changed than any other in the alphabet by the Greek inflexion, may also have been derived from the primitive Aitz-ila, which the Greeks read Etz-ila, and which signifies letter quite dead — that is, very weak letter. Be this as it may, the signification is the same, and explains that which nature gave to its modulation in the composition of the language.
 * 1996, Gunnar Eliasson, Firm Objectives, Controls and Organization: The Use of Information and the Transfer of Knowledge Within the Firm ( Springer, ISBN 9780792338703, page 86
 * The task is to establish a relation between the competence rents (= epsila), firm total productivity change (DTFP) and growth in output (DQ).