Hello. I would like to enter four Greek words into a .html (HyperText Markup 
Language) file produced by LaTeX2HTML that otherwise contains English-language 
words, figures, equations, and references; two of the four Greek words are the 
same. Could someone kindly provide me with a method in a .tex, LaTeX file which 
on executing a latex2html.... command on that file will produce nice-looking 
Greek words in a .html (HyperText Markup Language) file and without too much 
space between adjacent Greek letters in a Greek word?

Here is a brief summary of the sort of things I have tried so far, but have not 
yet had the good-looking success I desire in LaTeX2HTML output with the four 
Greek words:

A. 

..

\usepackage[greek,english]{babel}

..

\begin{document}

..

\greektext qronoc (to have "chi rho omicron nu omicron varsigma" in Greek 
letters)

...

\latintext For English-language text here

....

\end{document}

That sort of thing worked in the .dvi (DeVice-Independent) file produced by a 
command of the form "latex MyFile.tex," but probably only produced "qronos" for 
me in the .html file produced by a latex2html ...... command using LaTeX2HTML 
1.71.

B. 

Having $\chi\rho $o$\nu $o$\varsigma $ or something similar within text in my 
.tex, LaTeX file produced the corresponding Greek letters alright, but with too 
much space between adjacent Greek letters. Inserting multiple \! between 
adjacent Greek-letter designations unfortunately did not remove all of the 
space between adjacent Greek letters.

C.

Between \begin{equation} and \end{equation} I entered some Greek letters, 
perhaps like \chi\rho\mbox{o}\nu\mbox{o}\varsigma . The Greek letters were 
displayed in the LaTeX2HTML-produced, .html output file, but with too much 
space between some pairs of Greek letters. I may not yet have tried to insert 
\! between Greek-letter designations in equation mode.

D. 

In recent years my lengthy latex2html... command often had 
"html_version3.2,math" in it. But at least once in tests for the Greek words I 
had "html_version4.0,math,latin1" in such a command. And in equation mode I 
once used "html_version4.0" in my lengthy latex2html..... command in a failed 
test concerning a pair of Greek words.
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