| |

Accipiter |
|
|
Songs to Solomon 2:001
"I am the rose of Sharon, and the lily of the valleys."
"These are the times that try men's souls. The summer
soldier and the sunshine patriot will, in this crisis, shrink from
the service of their country." (Thomas Paine - AHD)
Chapter 54: The Plain of
Sharon and the Solomon
January 16: 2008: ( intro written on 12th )
The story of the Bible most surely contains many words that
express the wishes of envy, and especially that of the songs she
sings to Solomon, her temple of lies in telling him he is
compared to a company of horses for the Pharaoh among
others. She expressly tells us she is the second well (wel-2-;
helix, vault1, vault2, knapsack, Helen, volt,
parasitic worm), which
also aligns with the root etymology. She is the valley of the
dolls, and sees herself as a Rose, but also says" Look not upon
me, because I am black, because the sun hath looked upon me."
(1:6)
Helen is not the black sun, but this is what she must see, and
plays the role of the carbuncle, an analogy to a cinder, or
piece of coal burning as a dirty ember. It seems too much for
her to see a field of flowers, she prefers the lily with the
spikes close by, along with her routine of always being first.
In the ancient fields of Sharon, it was the legendary Jesus who
began his teachings that have been construed into a war of lies
about knowledge itself, trapping the feminine world with the
talon of deceit.
This leads to the accipiter, which is a type of falcon which has
acquired the slang hawk, rooted to another nasty group to
feed from its power it seems mostly. The sharp-shinned hawk
is the ( Accipiter striatus ) of North America (
ōku-
ninth gate (43)
), which has
a smaller compact body with a long colorful tail, and is a
predator upon inferior birds. The dark side of this story
belongs to the kap- root, where she demands you
wear a new helmet, which makes you believe "containing
something" is real, seemingly a form of superiority without
wings, as now you are a captive, occupied, to
catch, and deceive. The kap- root
represents the dirge*, or the office of the dead, and
will soon surface.
Superiority in the mind is now a morality on its own, one that
kills innocent people, as in Palestine, where the oppressor is
lying in order to give the false illusion of having a right, for
example, to torture innocent people to justify its own sickness,
as with the illegal weaponry being used, of which is also
another propagation where the responsibility has been thrown to
the wolves. The current Israel projects are sickening, as the
substance is void of any common sense. To attempt to continue on
in the middle of a sick world is not easy, so it was decided to
follow the strongest trail developed, and to arrange an attack
on certain aspects of the mosaic remodeling. Our next stop is
the sapphire, and to attempt to follow St. John's sequence of
clues. In this chapter, we first sneak under the skull, and pull
out the hardware of a small fry bird that is quite annoying, and
the first antimony of the year from area 51.
Part one:
Infomercial
|
9002 |
1-shall-et-skel-2-
to be under an obligation, O-grade (perfect?)
form *skol-, Old English- sceal, shall, (used
with the first and third person singular pronouns) shall,
Germanic- *skal-, I own, hence I ought, infomercial* |
|
~shall-
auxiliary verb- santee clause-
(first sense) used before a verb in the infinite sense;
futurity; off-sense prediction; (second sense) to wish to do
something where command most often replaces will; (third
sense) a consideration of the inevitable; must; Middle
English shal, from Old English sceal An easy
way to program people is to constantly obligate them to
future events that have not occurred, and to constantly say
(we need to think about the future, tomorrow, etc.), and the
bridge between envy and fear is strengthened, and the two
daisies remain, one fixed on Helios, and the other, only
seeing the metopic nightmare where fear is used as a weapon
against the spirit of life. You can see the two flowers
arrangements on the bios of life diagram, and posit the loss
of the ability to think, but also constantly worried about
the future while subtly allowing crime to be free, with only
the tic of the clock. We explore the feeling of relief,
and the boundaries between the inception-source-root of the
problem. The word history surrounding the word shall
is quite lengthy, and it is mentioned that it is the
"English of the English" by H. W. Fowler, and that everyone
is mostly alien to its distinctions. |
Part two:
Integument
48-carnage-carnal-carnassial-carnation-carnival1-carnivorous-carrion-carnuncle
-cenacle-charnel-coreopsis-coriaceous-corium-corm-cortex-crone-cuirass-currier-curt
-curtal-decorticate-excoriate-incarnate-kirtle-scabbard-scar-score-scrabble-scrap
-scrape-screen-screw-scrobiculate-scrofula-scrub-scurf-shard-share-sharp-shear
-sheer-shirt-shore-short-shrub-skerry-skirmish-skirt-et-sker-1-
also ker-, to cut; Section one: Basic form *sker-, *ker-,
[ Old English- scieran, sceran, shear, to cut, Low
German- scheren, sheer1, to move to and fro, and
Dutch scheren, to withdraw, depart, both sourced Germanic
*skeran
]; [ Old English- scēar, share2,
plowshare, Old English- scearu, scaru, share1,
portion, division (but recorded only in the sense of "fork
of the body," "tonsure") both sourced Germanic *skeraz
]; [ Old English- scēar, shear, scissors, Germanic-
*skēr-ō- and *sker-ez-; compound *skēr-berg-,
"sword protector," scabbard (see bhergh-1-),
Old French-
escauberc, scabbard, possibly from
a Germanic source akin to Old High German scarberc,
scabbard, both sourced Germanic *skēr- ];
Old Norse- scor,
score, notch, tally, twenty, Germanic- *skur;
Old Norse- sker, scar2,
skerry, low reef (< "something cut off"), from Germanic
suffixed form *skar-jam, Suffixed o-grade extended
form *skorp-o-, Old Norse- skarfr, scarf2,
diagonally-cut end of a board, Germanic- *skarfaz,
Suffixed o-grade extended form *skord-o-, Old
English- sceard, shard, a cut, notch,
Germanic- *skardaz; Extended form *skerd- in
suffixed zero-grade form *skrd-o-, [ Old English-
scort, sceort, short, "cut," short; Old English
scyrte, shirt, (< "cut pieces"), Old Norse-
skyrta, skirt, all sourced Germanic *skurtaz
]; [ Old French- eskermir, skirmish, to fight
with a sword, fence, and Old Italian scaramuccia,
skirmish, akin to a source Old High German skirmen,
to protect, Middle Dutch scherm, screen,
shield, both sourced Germanic extended form *skerm ];
Variant form *kar-, CARNAGE, CARNAL, CARNASSIAL,
CARNATION, CARNIVAL, CARRION, CARUNCLE,
CHARNEL, CRONE,
CARNIVOROUS, INCARNATE, Latin- carō (stem carn-),
flesh; Suffixed o-grade form *kor-yo, CORIACEOUS,
CORIUM, CUIRASS, CURRIER, EXCORIATE, Latin- corium,
leather, (originally "piece of hide"), Suffixed o-grade form
*kr-to-, CURT, CURTAL, KIRTLE, Latin- curtus,
short, Suffixed o-grade form *kor-mo, Greek-
kormos, corm, a trimmed tree trunk,
Suffixed
o-grade form *kor-i-, Greek- koris,
coreopsis, bedbug (< "cutter"), Suffixed zero-grade form
Old English scora, shore1,
Germanic- *skur-ō-; Section two:
Extended roots *skert-, *kert-, Zero-grade
form *krt- or o-grade form *kort-, CORTEX,
DECORTICATE, Latin- cortex, bark (< "that which can
be cut off"), Suffixed form *kert-snā, Latin-
cēna, cenacle, meal (< "portion of food");
Section three: Extended root *skerb(h)-, *skreb(h)-,
Old English- sceorf, scurf, scab, scurf,
possibly akin to Scandinavian, Germanic- *skerf-;
Section four: Extended root *skerb(h)-, *skreb(h)-,
[ Old English- scearp, sharp, slope, Italian-
scarpa, embankment, possibly from a Germanic source
akin to Gothic skarpō, pointed object, both sourced
Germanic *skarp- ]; Old Norse skrap, scrap,
"pieces", remains, Old Norse- skrapa, scrape,
to scratch, both sourced Germanic *skrap-; Old
English- scrybb, shrub, (< "rough plant"), Germanic-
*skrub; Latin- scrobis, scrobiculate,
trench, ditch; SCREW, SCROFULA, Latin- scrōfa, a sow
(< "rooter, digger") [Pokorny 4. sker-, Section I.
938] integument* (carnival2 - legwh-) |
|
~carnage-
man as beast; killing deemed necessary; massacre; Corpses,
especially those killed; dead bodies; French, from Old
French, from Old Italian carnaggio, from Medieval
Latin carnāticum, meat,
from Latin carō, carn-, flesh
~carnal-
related to the physical, especially sexual appetite:
carnal desire; Worldly or earthly; temporal: the
global carnage; of or
related to the body or flesh; bodily: carnal
vampires; Middle English,
from Old North French carnal, from Latin carnālis,
from Latin carō, carn-, flesh, see carnal knowledge
~carnassial-
adapted for tearing apart flesh: carnassial minded; a
consideration for teeth capable of tearing apart flesh,
especially one of the last upper premolars or first molars
teeth in carnivorous mammals, from French carnassier,
carnivorous, from Provencal, from carnasso,
meat in abundance, from carn,
flesh, from Latin carō, carn-
~carnation-
( Dianthus caryophyllus ) perennial plant having
showy, variously colored, usually double, often fragrant
flowers with fringed petals, also called clove pink;
Color: pinkish tint used in painting; from obsolete French,
flesh-colored, from Old French (from Old Italian
carngione, skin, complexion, from carne, flesh)
or from Late Latin carnātiō, carnātiōn-, flesh, both
from Latin carō, carn-
In the wicked way in which we seem
to get our future, the clove is an evergreen tree native to
Moluccas ( Syzygium armatticum ) which has a flower
bud which is often dried and used for spice, and also used
to ward off vampires with the root gheubh-
consciousness*. This root contains the hieroglyphic,
and some of the first impressions of relief.
~carnival1-
a festival marked by merrymaking and feasting during the
season just before Lent; traveling amusement which took the
name with rides, games, and sideshows; festival or revel:
spring carnival; Italian carnevale, from Old
Italian carnelevare, Shrovetide : carne,
meat (from Latin carō, carn-,
flesh, see sker-1-) + levare,
to remove (from Latin levāre, to raise, see legwh-;
lever, leprechaun, light2, fantail*)
Reference:
-Shrovetide- the three days, Shrove Sunday, Shrive
Monday, and Shrove Tuesday, preceding Ash Wednesday, Middle
English shroftide : shrof-, shriving (from
shriven, to shrive, see SHRIVE) + tid, time, see
TIDE1, [refs: shrove is past tense of shrive, and
shrive is making your confession when encountering this
sacred element called "time", often skirted for the black
son, and the auto-remove functions. The shrive is the root
skrībh-; manuscript, to write, and the Pokorny
is the phrase, intestinal fortitude*]
~carnivorous-
of or related to carnivores; flesh-eating or predatory: a
carnivorous bird; Botany: capable of trapping
small insects or other small organisms and absorbing
nutrients from living or dead flesh; insectivorous; from
Latin carnivorus : carō, carn-, flesh +
vorus, -vorous (feeding on, devour)
~carrion-
flesh that is now dead and decaying; feeding on such flesh,
Middle English careine, from Anglo-Norman, from
Vulgar Latin *carōnia, from Latin carō, see
carrion crow, black plumage [ref: carrion flower
especially S. herbacea, an herbaceous tendril-bearing
vine with clusters of green flowers and the odor of decaying
flesh]
~carnuncle-
Biology: a fleshy, naked outgrowth (such as a fowl's
wattles) at or near the hilum of certain seeds, as of the
caster-oil plant, obsolete French caruncule, from
Latin caruncula, diminutive of carō, flesh
It seems, that the castor-oil plant, a
poisonous African tree ( Ricinus communis ) may be
playing a mythical role of the second masculine stigma that
would align with Pollux and his position, that being Castor,
landing them both (Gemini twins) in the giant black hole of
space, approximately 46 light-years in time speak from
planet earth. They also serve as the Dioscuri, of which is
only a foursquare stack of hay no matter where it is built,
and Zeus was stacking on Darth Vader. See root
ker-2- ear2**
and
deiw-
deadems (25)
Zeus is performing the metopic and
emphasizing the mirrored section of the psyche, that of envy
and the body,
tyr-tuesday-zeus-et-deiw-
~cenacle-
a clique (Old French latch, or from obsolete French
cliquer, to click) or group, especially of writers; a
small dining room usually on an upper floor, French
cénacle, from Old French, the room where the Last Supper
took place, from Latin cēnāculum, dining room,
garret, from cēna, meal, see sker-1-
(sense 2), Middle English, from Old French, from
Latin cēnāculum The
cynic ( kwon-
eumenides (45)
) is obviously born in emotions with a little carbuncle and
some clove, but the result is a long journey off the regular
yellow-brick road, and often the view from such a place
confuses the Cartesian points of view, and where the meals
are taking place. The Last Supper may hold some of its
reference to that of being eaten by a Lion, as the story
does follow this lead.
~charnel-
a repository for the bones of bodies of the dead, a charnel
house; resembling, suggesting, or suitable for receiving the
dead, Middle English, from Old French, from Late Latin
carnāle, from neuter of Latin carnālis, of the
flesh, from carō, carn-, flesh
Greek Mythology: It is Charon,
not Sharon, who is a ferryman from the dunes who secretly
removes or conveys the dead spirits across the Styx, or
Cartesian plains, represented by Pluto in the navigator one,
which in result, is quite destructive to our species,
removing the land to accommodate worship of the dead that
did not burn as carnāle, or hamper the Lion spirit,
instead, they wander, and may return in mass numbers.
~coreopsis-
any of the various plants of the genus Coreopsis in
the composite family, especially the North American species,
having showy radiate flower heads with yellow, or rarely
purplish flowers, also called tickseed, New Latin
Coreopsis, genus name : Greek koris, bedbug + -opsis
(resembling a specific thing; see root
okw-
gmt (44))
-coriaceous-
of or like leather, especially in texture, from Late Latin
coriāceus, from Latin corium, leather, [ref:
see coriander (
Cilantro ), tiny white to pinkish flowers]
It's the corgi, who is the dwarf and
dog in one sense, who sneaks across Styx, and the Corinthian
order that represent the coriander, and the Chinese parsley,
or doublet affair. The view of the capital looks much
different when the stem is removed, and one can appreciated
the truer sense of relief, or by cutting one in half, and
engaging the wall, thus removing the circle of power.
~corium-
Anatomy: see dermis, Latin skin, see
Coriolis force- noninertial force, mathematical
description of reference related to motion postulated by
Gaspard G. de Coriolis (1792-1943), French
mathematician; also see cork, root
perkwu-
harass*, to set a dog on
This may also seem like a place where
your teeth are being conceived, cooked, and sorted.
~corm-
a short, thick, solid, food-storing underground stem,
sometimes bearing papery scale leaves, as in the crocus or
gladiolus, New Latin cormus, from Greek kormos,
a trimmed tree trunk The
reference provided will also always provide a
sharp end, so the
feeling of a leaf can be associated with many things, such
as this same feeling felt with the hands without the point,
but only visually, and a good example is a
broken off piece of dark blue shale (add
photo), or something that presents the first bit
of relief that subtly arrives, while avoiding the greedy
raven next door, or the cormorant, which leads to
just being a fancy double-crested bracket for her affair.
~cortex-
Anatomy: the outer layer of an internal organ or body
structure, as of the kidney or adrenal gland; the outer
layer of gray matter that covers the surface of the cerebral
hemisphere; Botany: the region of tissue in a root or
stem lying between the epidermis, and the vascular
tissue; an external layer, such as the bark or rind; Latin
bark
~crone-
implant, label attached to
feminine old age, Middle English, from Old North French
carogne, carrion,
cantankerous,
woman, from Vulgar Latin *carōnia,
carrion, from Latin carō,
carn-, flesh This is a
usage problem in the fact her sense is that of a Lion, but
it does not give the excuse to label any woman as old as
cover for an operation of killing or flying kites. It seems
Zeus ran on his own clock.
~cuirass-
implant program (shark: killer
of curiosity) (propaganda omitted attempting to tell you
that it is possible to not have feelings related to time
past); an ancient piece of metal worn around the head
with a plate attachment front and back;
Zoology:
protective covering of bony plates or scales,
Middle English curas, from Old French cuirace,
probably alteration (influenced by Old French cuir,
leather) of Old Provencal coirassa, from Late Latin (vestis),
leather (garment), feminine of coriāceus, from Latin
corium, hide The
cuibono is polka partner to curiass, and
represents a scale of self-interest, while also blinding
viewing the advantage coming from the bonus section, in
effect, becoming a bug. Soon after, the bug is the
cuirassier, a horse soldier who is really just a
freshwater sucker or what is referred to as cuiui.
Curiosity will allow an observer to bring forth the shale
without the armor of fake cuish but it does not guarantee
how good the food will be until a rhythm is obtained in the
wave reception which keeps the shark from drowning.
~currier-
one that prepares tanned hides for use, Middle English
curreiour, from French, from Latin coriārius,
from corium, leather
References:
-curricle- a light, open, two-wheeled carriage, drawn
by two horse abreast, from Latin curriculum, course,
racing chariot, from currere,
to run, see CURRENT
-curriculum- Latin course, from currere, to
run, see CURRENT
-currant- spineless shrub, from Middle English (raysons
of) coraunte, (raisins of) Corinth, from
Latin Corinthus
-current- belonging to the (present
time?) from Latin currere, see root kers-,
corral, chariot, ectoderm*
The current here is foreseen as
a river, and it can be felt, as when one is not directly
connected to it, there seems a feeling of lull, yet this is
a signal message that a house needs building. Plain and
simple, the education systems are racing horses because that
is they way they are designed, and created through the
elaborated propagation of life that is attuned to the clock
rather than life. You are told to believe that time is real,
and that it is present, yet this is completely abstracted as
an electrical charge, as in the cursor, or blinking star who
is only a time traveler in the mind of the observer.
~curt-
brief correspondence perceived as gruff by reception
interference (one person's demanded speed not matching the
other); using few words; shortened; terse; Middle English
short, brief, from Anglo-Norman, from Latin curtus;
see curtain- enclosing wall connecting two towers,
the end, may also be stuccoes with new cartilage, see
ghrendh-
curtain call (29)
~curtal-
an animal with a docked tail; something cut short or docked,
obsolete French courtault, from Old French, from
court, short, from Latin curtus, see curtilage-
enclosed area surrounding a house
The perception rests with the one who
thinks he/she is sitting in the
curule seat which is the same as the seat of a
chariot, or possibly one behind a piano. At this point in
the lex, the road ahead shows a curve sign, but the road
remains straight.
~decorticate-
implant, to remove the bark,
husk, or outer layer from; peel; to remove the surface
layer; membrane or fibrous cover of (an organ or structure),
Latin dēcorticāre, dēcorticāt- : de-, de- (do
the opposite of; reverse) + cortex, cortic-,
bark, rind
Decorum, which follows
this implant, is synonymous with another character called
etiquette, which is now
expressed in predominantly harsh terms as "compassion is
easily suitcased" by those who lie about their dreams of
self-pity. See root dek-; dogma, decorate
(stucco?), dignity (see curtain call), synecdoche2 (to
take), biohazard*
~excoriate-
implant (group of six sitting
on dung); to tear or wear off the skin of; abrade; see
chafe; to censure strongly; cloak: an editorial
that excoriated the administrations; Middle English
excoriaten, from Latin excoriāre, excoriāt-,
ex-, ex- (outside of, away, see root eghs-)
+ corium, skin, see hide The
root eghs- contains the first synecdoche,
the strange, and the extra electuary who is
like a dirty ember who is the enemy of curiosity, and may
represent the new carnallite*
Implant list:
exclusive of, excogitate,
excommunicable, excommunicate, excommunication
~incarnate-
invested with bodily nature: his incarnate feud ran on
Mercury gas; embodied in human form;
personified: a character who
is evil incarnate; Incarnadine;
Blood-red; to give bodily, especially human,
form to;
personify; a realization that may be complete
fantasy; actualize:
a regiment that incarnates the
mediators of excommunication; Middle English, from
Late Latin incarnātus, past participle of
incarnāre, to make flesh : Latin in-, causative
prefix, see IN-2 (within) + Latin corō, carn-, flesh,
[refs: see incarnation-
a Son of God (Jesus?) conceived in womb of a Mary is (true
God) and (true man); supernatural fantasy, see Jesus of
Nazareth, Palestine] The
incarnadine is the possible perception analogical to the
sanguine, and the beefed up worship of the body, but this
seem refracted energy, and the feeding is more a community
of those who seek the light, and the heat that is generated
from a hot object that you can still touch and feel from a
great distance, and not from the
kandy root, or incandesce, which is much
less complicated than screwing in a light bulb. See root
kand-, incense, to set fire to (see arson),
candor, dipole moment*
|
~kirtle-
Archaic: a man's knee length tunic or coat; a woman's
dress or skirt, Middle English kirtel, from Old
English cyrtel, probably ultimately from Latin
curtis, shortThe limestone Mayan tooth comes
from the second solar day, where the ballgame begins. The
so-called edge reveals itself every so gently beneath the
line of sight, as in the woman's red dress, The
kirschwasser is a close friend to kirtle, and
comes from the
wed-1- snowmen (26)
root where a sense of the stealing of water seems
associated, as in
HYDATED, from Greek hudōr, water,
Suffixed nasalized zero-grade form *u-n-d-ā-, (REBOUND)
This may be like living inside your own rainbow, in
actuality, it is a parasitic worm, and it may be using the
concept of (wave reception) as a mechanism to feed as the
excoriate, but based
more on body heat, with fake Love-in-a-mist,
which happens to align with Mayan thinking as an analogy to
the Stonehenge arrangement which sits inside the circle of
light. See ten-
love-in-a-mist (11)
~scabbard-
implant, sheath for a dagger,
sword, or blade; to furnish with such a sheath, Middle
English scauberc, scabbard, from Old French
escauberc, possibly from
Germanic origin
Reference:
-scabbard fish- any of the various marine fish with a
long narrow, silvery body, especially a cutlass fish (
Trichiurus leputrus ) of the western Atlantic
It may be that the mind builds
scaffolding in ways to hold up its illusion, possible a
decortication by means of scoffing, which in its second
version, means "to eat greedily". There is no relief from
the blade, there is only pain. Here, the vampires reign
living in the midst of the rind referencing the
inside. The risk you take is the cake you bake?
~scar-
scar2: a protruding, isolated
rock; a bare rocky place on a mountainside or other steep
slope, Middle English skerre, from Old Norse sker, low reef;
scar1: blade; a
mark on the skin left after blade; a lingering sign of
damage or injury caused by blades and swords that remain;
Middle English, alteration of
escare, from Old French
scab, from Late Latin
eschara, from Greek
eskhara, hearth, scab caused by burning, [
note: scabs are something that heals, pain never
really heals, they remain to be absorbed ]
Here, it seems the crab and the
beetle meet up, an ancient Egyptian stone sculptured as a
gemstone, and a talisman symbolizing the soul, from Latin
scarabaeus. In the heart of the spirit rests three
astrological signs of water, the crab is the one who
scurries onto the beach to salvage scrap, an analogy to the
ferryman in some sense. This twisted fish story continues
with the Scorpion, or now possibly a bedbug with a on/off
button in the middle of the alpha codes to boot. It may be
the two well-known fish have always designated this
distinction.
~score- a
notch or incision that determines weight; the result of the
type of tally kept; numerical record perceived as seduction;
deduction attributed to points (wanton tugboat; see
deuk- wolfhound*); an examination of life
measured; (inhabited as valid through habit, and what is
acceptably forgiven; see
ghabh- contiguous*); a harboring of
satisfaction for one's completed house with both feelings of
a ground and a reason of any nature; a group of 20 items (10
each side); Music: the written form of a composition
for orchestral or vocal parts, either complete or for a
particular instrument or voice; the written composition for
a musical comedy; Slang: a scar that assumes an
advantage; scarface; an instance or act of feeding on the
gaud, regardless of law or conduct, (see joy, root gāu-
clause*); Carpentry: to mark a straight line
in order to perform a break in the material scored, such as
glass, tile, or thin metal; sexual seduction (state terror
combined with terror; divide and rule; also see scarf),
Middle English, from Old English *scrou, twenty, from
Old Norse skor
~scrabble-
a condition of brain disease + mind, (see frenetic,
root
gwhren-
demandant*);
scraping or groping from perceived weight; disorderly
haste; clamber; to frenetically point out; scribble,
Dutch schrabbelen, from Middle Dutch,
frequentative of schrabben, to scrape, [refs:
plaintiff and motif] The
grope is the one who "reaches about uncertainty", and
possibly the beginning of self-destruction in the
circle of fire.
~scrap-
scrap2:
implanted, to fight, scuffle; scar, abrade;
blade (perhaps from scrape?) (no more data?); scrap1:
small bits or pieces; leftovers (may be
overwhelming); the machination of the mind using
numerology manifesting infinite divide and rule at low
reef (may be dangerous); that which drips out of the
Lions mouth seen as gristle; worthless junk (see
scarpula, feathers on the shoulder of a bird), Middle
English, from Old Norse skrap, trifles, pieces
The word
crackling that was tagged to this word
is implanted as propaganda and comes from
cracknel, which is
the crane, and the crow, (see bios
direction), and actually a growl to emulate the
new cherry, or berry, the jackdaw in the mind. Once
the cat is seen, she slowly dies as a vampire dies.
See root gerć-2- C.A.T.,
comp*
~scrape- to remove
(an outer layer, for example) from a surface or edge
by forceful strokes of rubbing or scaring using an
additional instrument; to abrade or smooth by rubbing:
burnished the ideology of war; to remove excess
from a surface using a thin edged instrument; to
forcefully remove or abrade a surface using excess
weight: screeching nails on the blackboard scraped
the minute fragments of bone into dust; the
product of using the edge: amassed a severe
scraping burn; an amount of frugality expressed in
tone: the languor in her tears turned to stone;
(harsh grating noise; see implant scrap); Middle
English scrapen, from Old Norse skrapa
There is a big difference between
scraping and sanding, and the perception of sound
related to it, as scraping is not that noisy, however,
sanding is quite noisy. So what better way to confuse
you and create shortcut words to ride upon the subtle
concepts of others to illustrate the fight, and
instill the blades of grass that divide us infinitely,
and literally, a formation of the anti-flying-self.
~screen- a movable device, especially a framed-one
capable of height that is used as a divider or
seemingly a decorative barrier to remove the fire in
the eye in which will (divide, protect, and conceal
the eyes or body; shades): the hedge endlessly
turned into the wind behind the screen within; a
process of sifting (such as cleaning seeds for
planting or consumption by shaking (vibration) versus
stirring); Mining:
consumption of the resources and riding the stirrups:
divisions of the sand, protected by gravel,
screened the coal from the mind; a process of
knit-picking to appease preferences (may be frenetic);
a sheet mesh of fine wire that is woven leaving behind
open spaces where air flow may pass from and to an
enclosed space; a label for the circle of fire; silver
screen; (see keyhole); Electronics: label for
the phosphorescent view depicted for television,
monitor, and/or radar receiver; the electrode placed
between the anode and the control grid in a tetrode
valve, also called screen grid; crossing grid lines
upon the surface of a lens used for camera half-tone
production; Military: a
scrabble of troupes or bad scrapers (see root
deru- seer's not, sieve,
bolt2*); to
block or hide (used as propaganda); to inspect
(see
sker-2- crinoline, spider
lily); a test of infection and defection; removing
or adding chafe (begins with
the warming up with fluorescence, see root kelć-1-
scald, lee, then
add construction root
dhē-
three fates (12));
obscuring opponents for a clear (shot);
a shaky process of positioning; Middle English
screne, from Old North French escren, from
Middle Dutch scherm, shield, screen
~screw-
an cylindrical rod incised with one or more
helical or advancing spiral threads, as a lead screw
or worm screw; the tapped collar or socket (die, see
dō- bouillabaisse*) that receives this
rod; a metal pin with incised threads where one
end is flattened for a perpendicular slot that can be
driven with force by turning into a screwdriver as a
fastener (must include two parts): 1) tapered pointed
screw; 2) flat-tipped machine screw (measurement of
revolution par distance); corkscrew: the device
flew around like a screw top; perception of the
twisting of the fire: her screwy turnkey was the
guards piston; what is considered salary or wages;
something smoked: his reign left the signet screwed
to an old broken-down horse; a perception where
fastening takes place but it is overwhelmingly
considered as tightening: they screwed aimlessly
with tightening their own noose; see torque
(screws can remove all scrap around their projection,
one of the two becoming stripped,
terkw- machismo
(27));
Middle English skrewe, from Old French
escrove, female screw, nut, perhaps from
Medieval Latin scrōfa, from Latin, sow
The dictionary leaves you with
much confusion, as the screw and nut are only threaded
the same, they are not actually the same thing.
Between them is a monkey wrench that does not exist.
The die is classified as the female part that would
scar the pin into shape, becoming a screw. Once this
is completed, the die is duplicated into nuts.
~scrobiculate-
Biology: marked with many shallow depressions,
grooves, or pits, Latin scrobiculus, diminutive
of scrobis, trench + -ATE1 (having,
rank)
~scrofula-
a bacterial infection associated with tuberculosis
affecting the (Lymph nodes) often around the neck, and
unacceptably common in children and claimed to be
spread by milk-related so-called antigens, also called
struma, Middle English scrophula, from
Late Latin scrōfulae, swelling of the glands,
diminutive of Late scrōfa, sow
~scrub-
scrub1: (see catfish; bottom feeder); to
remove dirt or stains by hard rubbing; to remove dirt
or stains by no rubbing at all (see skirt): they
scrubbed their plans for a brain; a washing of
dirt off the body or hands; Middle English scrobben,
to currycomb a horse, from Middle English schrobben,
to clean by rubbing, scrape,
scrub2: no derivative,
implant tagged to shrub or bush; Australian outback,
Middle English, variant
of shrubbe, shrub, [ref: currycomb-
comb with metal teeth]
~scurf-
possible implant, scaly
or shredded dry skin, such as dandruff; loose, scaly,
crust coating a surface, especially of a plant: the
desert floor has a scurfiness between the cracklings;
Middle English, probably from Scandinavian origin
~shard-
a weight that determines the notch; broken piece of
tile or ceramic; fragment or small part; brittle
substance: shards of the dogma that once
existed; Zoology:
tough sheath or covering, such as a shell,
scale, or plate; the elytron or outer wing covering of
a beetle, Middle English sherd, from Old
English sceard, cut notch
~share-
a part or portioning (apposition) that is assumed to
have value which may be distributed to others based on
either labor or potter's clay that must be spun on the
time wheel; a portioning out specifically to increase
power by using people as numbers; an obligation
revealed by mathematics where human life must consider
the number section, thus making sure no one is hurt;
sharecrop; see proportion; to be able to
experience life without fear of being harmed by
appositions of power; lawful; Middle English, from Old
English scearu, division; Synonyms:
participate, partake
Reference:
-shari'a- Islam: the code of law based on
the Koran, Arabic šar'īya, lawfulness, from
šar'ī, lawful, from aš-šar',
Revelation, Islamic law
~sharp- a process of increasing distinction:
the curry sharpened the beans; a subtle process of
termination: the state terror ended nothing;
the ability of intellectual penetration; (see astute,
wes-1-
monostich (27));
an alert sense; expression containing violence: a
sharp and shrill temper; strongly affecting in
sense; sudden; a feeling of sun burn: the
sandpaper scraped to the bone; Music:
raised in pitch in semitone; being above the proper
pitch; having the key signatures in sharps;
Linguistics: Voiceless, used of a consonant; a
sense of satisfaction to punctuate; a note symbolizing
an raise in tone by one semitone; a slender sewing
needle; shrewdness or deceit, Middle English sharp,
from Old English scearp, slope
The emphasis for sharp seems on
the directional (up) which may be a bit deceiving, as
both Old English spellings for share and
sharp, only differ with the two letter (up). Then,
the attachment of keen may also be a loose
synonym and acute
is overly obvious.
~shear-
acute labeling for a process of shearing force;
fleecing of hair; a process of clipping or cutting;
scissors (addressed as plural); see sheers; an
apparatus used to lift heavy weights, consisting of
two or more open spars joined at the top, and spread
at the base, the tackle being suspended from the top;
Physics: an applied force or system of forces
that have tendency for producing (shearing strain,
also see implosion); Middle English sheren,
from Old English sceran N., from Middle
English shere, from Old English scēar
~sheer-
sheer1: to swerve or cause to swerve from a
course; deviating course; Nautical: the upward curve,
or amount of upward curve of the longitudinal lines of
a ship's hull as viewed from the side; the position in
which a ship is placed to enable it to keep clear of a
single low anchor, probably partly from Low German scheren, to move to and from: said of boats, and
partly from Dutch scheren, to withdraw; sheer2:
no derivative, a thin, fine transparent
sheet; airy; completely such, without
qualification or exception: sheer bliss; pure;
a refraction of difficulty: sheer rock cliffs;
a major relief; obsolete shere, thin, clear,
partly from Middle English skir, bright, clean
(from Old Norse skćrr); sheer3:
sheers- plural, variant
of shear
~shirt-
a garment for the upper part of the body typically
with a split opening, with two additional holes, or
sometimes with three small holes, and one big one;
Nave: commonly addressed as undershirt,
nightshirt, and T-shirt, weaved across the metope, see
shirr- decorative rows of parallel stitching,
Middle English shirte, from Old English
scyrte, skirt
~shore-
shore1: the land perceived along the plane
between land and sea, land around a lake, land along a
river; coast; land as opposed to water: a sailor with an assignment on shore
-attributive; modifier, Middle
English shore, from Old English scora,
from Germanic- *skur-ō-
shore2: to support by or as if by
using a prop; a column or beam used as a wedge; see
crab; Middle English shoren, from shore,
prop, probably from Middle Low German schōre,
barrier, or Middle Dutch scōre, prop
Reference:
-shore crab- any of the numerous crabs, such as
the spider crab or common shore crab ( Pachygraspus
transversus ) found along land/sea barriers
~short-
implanted program
(created from cortex propaganda);
a measurement that is considered insufficient;
scrap; (manipulation of tone; see perfectionism;
borderline psychopathy); a consideration for length
which may or may not work out in the mind initially;
brief; a form of degree; measurement often
emphasized on deficiency: a short cognition; (note:
memory is not short, it is forever, just maybe not
right on the surface of the water); a process of
criminal activity between the gain or loss; disease of
the mind (see metaphrase-
metaphysical alteration); processing of less
than (this is often not accepted, so ways are created
to continue the disease); label for pie crust (propaganda);
Linguistics: of, related to, or being a speech
sound of relatively brief duration, as the first vowel
sound in the Latin word mălus, "evil," as
compared with the same or similar sound of relatively
long duration, as the first vowel sound in the Latin
word mālus, "apple tree"; Grammar: of,
related to, or being a pronunciation of vowel sounds,
as the pronunciation (ă) in pat, (ě) in
pet, (ĭ) in pit, (ŏ) in pot, (ŭ)
in putt, and (ōō) in put; (historically
descended from a vowel of brief duration; unaccented);
a quantitative process related to addressing music or
sound; abruptness for lack of length now possibly
considered a disadvantage; having no rights to make
money from another but doing so anyway (without owning
what one is selling); a form of measurement that does
not reach the desired end; lost early; a period of
time that does not match or reach expected normalcy; a
leftover product; shortstop (propaganda);
a circuit that is stopped; a label for underwear based
on the fact it does not cover the skin on lower
elevations; a feeling of not receiving as much as
expected; an abbreviation of: Ed is short for
Edmund; Middle English, from Old English sceort,
scort, (sound key:
escort) The word
short should be
studied, as it represents other feelings that are some
of the most vital, especially that of even morality,
and because of this, and the shortstop, which seems
specifically designed to thwart discernment of the
program itself, the fact that tone is altered, and
that letters are in effect attacking the vowels in
some kind of game, caution is critical. Time is nested
in this feeling also, and study of this effect should
be considered in discerning navigation. This word also
represents the feeling of the cut, and in carpentry,
this feeling can be avoided by using the stop where
the expected result is trapped between the cut and and
stop, because the stop is (preset) and was not mobile.
~shrub-
shrub1: woody plant of relatively low height, having
several stems arising from the base and lacking a
single trunk; a bush (Old English busc, Old French
bois,
wood N. sense 3, possibly from Dutch
bauch);
Middle English shrubbe, from Old English scrybb,
shrub2:
implant, beverage
designed unintelligently to describe a concoction for
propaganda, from Arabic šurb, a drink, from
šariba, to drink The
shrove arrangement nested on the word shrub may lead
to understanding the burning bush mentioned in Exodus
of the King James Holy Bible, and could possibly
represent a conversation with envy as the predominant
god being carried forward directly from the previous
chapter.
~skerry-
a small rocky reef or island, Scots, diminutive of Old
Norse sker
Reference:
-skimmer- ( Runchops nigra ) Black
skimmers are often seen in or near these areas, a
coastal bird who skims water with a lower mandible,
also a label for a straw hat, with a stiff wide brim,
and a flat shallow crown.
~skirmish-
the minor battle between being "in" or "out" (location
unknown), may result in death (no shortstop); dispute
often leading to death and war; Middle English
skirmisshe, alteration (influenced by Middle
English skirmisshen, to brandish a weapon, from
Old French eskemir, eskirmiss-, to fight with a
sword, fence) of skarmush, from Old French
eskarmouch, from Old Italian scaramuccia,
of Germanic origin
~skirt-
a garment that falls freely, or has a dividing line
between it and the ground; a garment worn by both
women and men in various version; label for a leather
strap on one side of the horse where the stirrups
ends; the lower outer section of a rocket; outskirts;
to lie along or from the edge of; border: the creek
that skirts our land; to pass around rather than
across or through: the saddle groped the beast;
to pass by closely as though almost directly: the
shim wedged its way by; evasion as circumlocution
(see root
tolkw-
male fern*); something
that seems to move along the edge of a border; (see
hymn; simple song of praise, often having flare)
I cannot say enough about this
group, but the reader should note this group has the
feel of spin, as
many roots beginning with (s) do represent in the
fuller sense. It seems impossible to imagine the
seashore spinning, so one question that rises about
this group is to determine if the circle is that of
light, or is it of fire, or both? The incandescent
light is analogical to (super-hot), as halogen, and
the conversions run on gas, providing a false light
using Mercury, literally using the power of the
spiritual nature of elements to provide the light over
the sun, under the assumption it will save energy in a
broken and failing system of over consumption. |
Part three: Inspect
30-arrange-circle-crepe-crest-cricoid-crinoline1-crisp-crispate-crissum-crista-cristate
-crown-curb-curvature-curve-curvet-derange-flounce-kurtosis-ranch-range-rank-ridge-ring
-rink-ringhals1-ruck-rucksack-search-shrink-et-sker-2-
to turn, bend, Presumed base of a number of distantly related
derivatives, Extended form *(s)kreg- in nasalized form
*(s)kre-n-g-, Old English- scrincan, shrink,
to wither, shrivel up, Germanic- *skrink; [ variant *kre-n-g-,
Old Norse- hrukka, ruck2, a
crease, fold, Old French- fronce, flounce1,
pleat, both sourced Germanic *hrunk ]; Extended form
*(s)kregh- in nasalized form *skre-n-gh-, [ Old
English- hring, ring, a ring; RANCH, RANGE, RANK1,
RINK, ARRANGE, DERANGE, Old French- renc, reng,
line, row, Middle Dutch- rinc, ringhals
(combining form ring-), a ring, all sourced Germanic *hringaz,
something curved, circle; Extended from *kreuk-, Old
English- hrycg, spine, ridge, Old High German-
hrukki, rucksack, back, both sourced Germanic
hrugjaz; Suffixed variant form *kurwo, CURB,
CURVATURE, CURVE, CURVET, Latin- curvus, bent, curved;
Suffixed extended form *kris-ni-, Latin- crīnis,
crinoline (< *crisnis), hair, Suffixed extended form *kris-tā-,
CREST, CRISTA, CRISTATE, Latin- crista, tuff, crest;
Suffixed extended form *krip-so-, CREPE, CRISP, CRISPATE,
Latin- crispus (metathesized from *crispus),
curly; Extended expressive form *krīss-, Latin-
crīsāre, crissum, (of women) to wiggle the hips
during copulation; Perhaps reduplicated form *kr-kr-o-,
(CIRCA), CIRCLE, (CIRCUM-), (CORONA), CROWN, Greek- korōnos,
curved; Suffixed variant form *kur-to, Greek- kurtos,
kurtosis, bent [Pokorny 3. (s)ker- 935] inspect*
(crinoline2 - lĭno-) (ringhals2
- kwel-1-) |
|
~arrange-
to place or put into a specific order of relation;
dispose (see destroy,
oppose, root apo-): arranged the items into
the perceived plan; a forced preparation in order to
save time; cut sheet; label for a period of time used
to place things in order: arranged the flowers in the
vase; Music: to reset (a composition) for other
instruments or voices or for another style of performances:
the megaliths were arranged around the tones; an
agreement based on preparation: she arranged a long Greek
wedding; Middle English arengier : a-, to
[from Latin ad-; see AD- (paramount, to, toward, a3*,
on] + rengier, to put in
a line (from reng, line) Synonyms:
marshal, order, organize, sort,
systematize
It may be that it is possible to lose
perception of the difference between the line, and the
circle, by moving upon it in the mind, as to skirt around
it. There is also now the issue with the strong sense of a
feminine aspect related to a row or line, as in the sound
key "reign gear" as in reindeer, and also the word Kriss,
the starter for Kriss Kringle, which also is a sound key for
crepe which may be why Santa crept down the fire hole
because she wasn't a he.
~circle-
a continuous plane curve line drawn from a center fixed
point in the plane with an equidistant device; a reference
for the planar region in boundary of the line; something
that elevates from the planar curve at the points of the
line; ring; a reference for the course of this line
in a circuit or orbit: the moon encircled the earth;
an arrangement of seats or chairs on a curvature line as in
a theater; a reference for the start and finish points upon
the line and referenced for continuously repeating itself;
to form a group of items or people that personify the power
of the circle; clique; Logic: a vicious
circle: she had her circle of jingle bells; to move
in a circle around?, Middle English cercle, from Old
French, from Latin curculus, diminutive of circus,
circle, from Greek kirkos, krikos, Synonyms:
coterie (see cote, cottage), set (see root
sed-; see2, hutzpah*), clique (latch)
Lines drawn with the device, a
compass, always curve equidistantly forever, until a cut is
made. This may be the power or an element to discern. In
space, it is gravity and weight that seem forever.
~crepe-
also crape, Nave: a perceived line between
black and white; light, thin soft fabric, such as silk,
cotton, wool, or another fiber, with a crinkled surface; a
very thin small pancake, often stuffed and rolled up, French
crępe, from Old French crespe, curly, from
Latin crispus
Reference:
-crepuscule- Twilight, Middle English, from Old
French, from Latin crepusculum, from creper,
dark
The page of reference is 440, and it
is loaded. A return to pick up the Creole, and boot the crew
is needed, when the chapter isn't exploding.
~crest-
the ornaments of projection on the head of a bird or other
animal, as inside the cat's ear; an elevated or irregular
toothed ridge on the stigma of certain flowers (see basil);
feathers or simulated plumes addressed to the head in
various demeanors; crested helmet; Heraldry: a
device placed above a shield displayed on a signet (coat of
many arms); perception opposing elevation; ridge; the
formation of an assimilating edge: cresting waves; to
reach a crest; inclination; Middle English creste,
from Old French, from Latin crista
~cricoid-
a ring-shaped cartilage of the lower larynx that articulates
with the thyroid cartilage and artenoid cartilages, New
Latin cricoīdēs, from Greek krikoeidēs,
ring-shaped : krikos, ring + oeidēs, -old
The B horizon is back, and the
basil. The xylem of trees also share this phenomena of
making continuous circles similar to cartilage, but
accommodating passage of water. Nature seems to know where
the horizon rests, and uses this quite productively in a
trilogy that possibly releases pressure, while bees are more
advanced in construction techniques, using the acute
auto-relief geometric power.
~crinoline1-
a coarse, stiff fabric of cotton or horsehair used
especially to line and stiffen hats and garments; a
petticoat made of this fabric; a hoop skirt, French,
from Italian crinolino : crino, horsehair
(from Latin crīnis, hair, see sker-2-)
+ lino, flax (from Latin līnum, see lĭno-;
line1, line2, flash-back*)
~crisp-
seeming to have a firmness, but also immediately crumbly or
brittle: crisp pie crust; pleasingly firm and fresh:
the cake stood crisp on the columns; bracing;
invigorating: the pick-up sticks fell into a crisp stack;
lively; sprightly: music with a crisp sound;
conspicuously clean or new: crisp mountain air; a
perceived incisiveness: a crisp new text message;
brisk clarity easily absorbed: the distance between the
bases was clean and crisp; easily crumbled: the flesh
was burned to a crisp; baked fruit with topping:
cherry crisp; a potato chip: the blade cleaned crisp
curls off the batch; a breeze off the ocean: the
surface of the water was crisp with life; Middle
English, curly, from Old English, from Latin crispus
For navigation purposes, it is
possible that a sense of the trilogy, or ark effect is
occurring in the mind in relation to both the air and fire
using the time program, and it could be that the sense do
move these completely to one side or the other in
interpretation.
~crispate-
curled or ruffled, as the margins of certain leaves, Latin
crispātus, past participle of crispāre, to
curl, from crispus, curly
~crissum-
Zoology?: the feathers or area under the tail of a
bird surrounding the cloacal opening, New Latin, from Latin
crīsāre, to move the buttocks during intercourse, no
more data
~crista-
Anatomy: a crest or ridge as on the top of a bone;
Biology: one of the inward projections or folds of the
inner membrane of a mitochrondrion, (Greek mitos,
warp thread + Greek khondrion, diminutive of
khrondos, grain, granule, see root
ghrendh-
curtain call (29)),
Latin
The
ghrendh-
root lists the word fraise,
which is a spiked border, similar to what might decor the
ring of a crown, only stretched out like the tire-stops
rolled out in front of rubber tires. This can also be the
phrase, in which in itself becomes a weapon, or a
protective barrier from the inside.
~cristate-
having or forming a crest or crista, Latin cristātus,
from crista, tuft
Now, it seems the reference for a
ridge on a bone is also the feathery fine hairs displayed
inside the cat's ear, so there are two possible elevations
which may become one. There is also the criss cross defined
as "mark of a cross" short for Crist-cross (me speed),
may Christ's cross (give me success). This may likely be
associated with the swastika effect since it is based on
death, and related to the Chi-Rho.
~crown-
a decorative metal ring worn on the head encased with
precious stones, and worn by those who claim power over
others; a monarchy; a distinction of award;
Chiefly British: a silver coin formerly used in Great
Britain and worth five shillings; any one of several coins,
such as the koruna, the krona, or the krone,
having a name that means "crown", see table at currency; the
top part of an animal; head; a consideration for
value in excess; Dentistry: an extreme measure to
save rotting teeth by reconstituting enamel and porcelain
type substances into molds that surround the savable stem of
the rotting tooth, which may now not-rot, or not-rot as
fast; Nautical: the lowest part of the anchor, where
the arms are joined to the shank; Botany: the upper
part of a tree, including the branches and leaves; the part
of a plant, usually at ground level, where the stem and
roots merge; the persistent, mostly underground base of a
perennial herb; see corona, sense 5; the crest of an animal,
especially a bird; a portion of cut gemstone above the
girdle; santee clauses:
a placing of trust; a feeling of infinite relief; a measure
of support: finishing touches with a crown; the
emergence of new life from the womb; Middle English
crowne, from Anglo-Norman coroune, from Latin
corōna, wreath, garland, crown, from Greek korōnos,
curved
The Monarchianism carried forward
maintained the monotheism with emphasis on the Godhead,
which may be why a crown is still worn today. The
independent hypostasis of the God the Son is also
problematic with no account of femininity on the surface
which only leads to destruction, as both of these concepts
of position are feminine in many senses. The monarch is from
Greek monarkhos : mono-, mono- + arkhein,
to rule, also see monachism from Greek monakhos,
monk. According to that nave, this is a representation for
the rainbow goddess, but it may presume to be an almighty
God and almighty man.
~curb- (Blend of Middle English) curved piece of wood
(from Old French corbe, curved object, from corbe,
curved, from Latin curvus) and Middle English
corbe, horse strap (from corben, to bow down,
halt, from Old French corber, to bow down, from Latin
curvāre, from curvus, curved, bent; Stones
that are formed into a line, ridge, or circle; enclosing
framework; picture frame; the chain or strap that passes
under a horse's lower jaw and serves in conjunction with the
bit to retrain the horse; control or rein in; gutter;
furnish with a curb
~curvature-
Mathematics: the ratio of the change in the
angle of the tangent that moves over a given arc to the
length of the arc; the protracted section of this arc; a
characterization of contour or smoothing of a perceived
(sharp) edge; (see contour- from tornus, lathe, Greek
tornos, see terć-1-;
transom, thrill, trunk, M* ); a relatively smooth bend, such
as in a creek; the reciprocal section adjacent to the radius
line of a circle; Medical: human body deformation related to
bone structure; Middle English, from Latin curvātūra,
from curvātus, past participle of curvāre, to
bend, from curvus, curved
~curve-
a line that deviates from straightness in a smoothing
fashion; ellipse; a surface that deviates from
planarity (flat surface) but also seems to smooth out
quickly; envisioning a curve that is smooth; Education:
an application whereby students are measured against each
other whether or not the condition of the student
(actual and truthful) knowledge is sound, and then telling
you that it is based on the results that are stigmatized by
claiming a proportional curve mathematical formulation that
may be completely worthless, and the graph is providing
cover; Mathematics: the graph of a function on a
coordinate plane; Imaginative: the intersection of two
surfaces in three dimensions; to begin curving or throw a
curve; from Middle English, curved, from Latin curvus
The word ellipse was not
mentioned in the dictionary with this word which seems odd,
as this is a standard term for anyone who makes curvy
things. It also seems to lead away from the (perfect) arch,
or rainbow thinking toward the elliptical thinking. It may
have something to do with the extremely weird root,
leikw-
feedbag* which needs chewin.
~curvet-
a light leap by a (trained) horse in which both hind legs
leave the ground just before the forelegs are set down;
prance; frolic; Italian corvetta, from Old Italian,
from Old French courbette, from courber, to
curve, from Latin curvāre, from curvus, curve
~derange-
illogical implant- make insane;
French déranger, from Old French desrengier :
des-, de- (reverse, root de-;
deteriorate) + reng, line (of Germanic origin)
Here, you were placed (on the line)
and are now referenced as (being away from or off of) the
line, or circle, and classified as insane. This clearly
makes no sense, and seems related to the root group de-,
which has a Pokorny of B horizon*. The question to
ask is, why are feelings referenced as being on the line or
circle in the first place?
|
|
~flounce-
flounce1: a strip or
decorative, usually gathered or pleated material attached by
one edge, as on a garment or curtain; to trim with a strip
or strips of gathered or pleated material, alteration of
frounce, from Middle English, pleat, from Old French
fronce,
of Germanic origin; flounce2: no
derivative, to move in a lively or bouncy matter; to
move with exaggerated or affected motions: flounced
petulantly out of the house; to move clumsily; flounder,
possibly Scandinavian
Pleat leads to plait and the root plek-,
two-fold, twine, which I read on Pokorny as the
hearthstone* This is another segment of relief that
comes through these feelings.
~kurtosis-
the generalized formula or a quantity indicative of the
generalized form of a statistical frequency curve near the
mean of the distribution, Greek kurtōsis, curvature,
from kurtos, bent
~ranch-
(American Spanish rancho) small farm, from Spanish
hut, group of people who eat together, from Old Spanish
rancharse, to be billeted, from Old French se
ranger, to be arranged, from renc, reng, row,
line; see billet1: to be
quartered, official register, document, or
billet2: ingot, log on the fire
~range-
Mathematics: a set of values a given function may
take on; gamut of tones; Nautical: setting a path on
an anchor line so that it will not tangle when released; an
extent of perception, knowledge, experience, or ability
often measured by inferior methods; a process of excessive
measurement of variations within a scope for purposes of
abuse; maximum payload distance; an area within eyesight but
also tested for the unseen; a group or chain of mountains;
one of a series of double-faced bookcases in a library stack
room; a north-south strip of townships, each six miles
square, numbered east to west from a specified meridian in
the U.S. public land survey; a stove with spaces for cooking
a number of things at the same time; to superficially
classify nested information; an extension on a straight line
determining the point of interest or target; a varying
within a group of specified limits; to extend or lie in the
same direction: "Whatsoever comes athwart his
affection ranges evenly with mine." (Shakespeare -
AHD); to swing from a pivot point freely; (see pendulum),
Middle English, row, rank, from Old French, from rangier,
to put in a row, from rang, reng, line, of Germanic
origin, Synonyms: ambit,
compass, orbit, purview, reach,
scope, sweep
~rank-
Mathematics: weight and value combined; an form
applied to the ego; checkers; to place in a row (warning:
moving onto the curve) outrank;
Middle English, line, row, from Old French ranc, renc,
of Germanic origin Things must
be weighed, but the value remains infinite depending on the
use. Rank then, is completely hypothetical, and a form of
propaganda.
-ridge-
a long or extended crest; upper section: the ridge of the
mountains; a long narrow chain of mountains, also called
ridgeline; a period of lower atmospheric pressure over the
surface of the earth, also called wedge; a long, narrow, or
crested part of the body: the ridge of the nose;
the horizontal line formed by the junction of two sloping
planes, such as the two planes in incisive pitch, or an
arch, as in a rainbow protracted; to mark with form; see
(plowshare); Middle English rigge, from Old English
hrycg
~ring-
ring1: Mathematics: the area
between two concentric circles; (annulus, diminutive of
anus); Mathematics: a set of elements subject to the
operations of addition and multiplication in which the set
is commutative under addition and associative under
multiplication, and in which the two operations are related
by distributive laws; any of the turns (curve) constituting
a repeating spiral; helix; Chemistry: a group
of atoms linked by bonds that may be represented graphically
in circular or triangular form, in this sense, also called
closed chain; to enclose a group, thing, place, or
idea; surround; to strip the bark from a living tree
trunk; girdle; a disc-shaped
object that seems fascinating; UFO; a circular course;
Middle English, from Old English, hring,
ring2: no derivative, label for what
is heard in pitch or frequency; chime; a resonant
sound; tuning fork; to be filled with rumor or
resound; bell; suggestion of quality referencing the
ring inside and out; an immediate change of view; Middle
English ringen, from Old English hringan
~ringhals1- an African snake (
hemachatus haemachatus ) that
spits venom at the eyes of an attacker, sometimes causing
blindness, also called spitting cobra, obsolete Afrikaans :
ring, ring (from Middle Dutch rinc, see sker-2
+ hals, neck (from Middle Dutch, see kwel-1-)
~rink- a
large area enclosed with a smoothed surface of ice for
skating, hockey, or curling; large surface areas considered
sporty; bowling green; team of players in quoits,
bowling, or curling; Middle English renk,
racecourse, from Old French renc, line, from
Germanic origin
~ruck-
ruck1: no derivative,
implant, downgrading based on
illogical supremacy, Middle English ruke, heap,
probably of Scandinavian origin; ruck2: to make a
fold in; crease; pucker; score, ultimately from Old Norse
hrukka, wrinkle, fold
~rucksack-
a knapsack; German : dialectal Ruck, back
(from Middle High German rück, ruck, from Old
High German hrukki + Sack, sack (from Middle
High German sac, from Old High German, from Latin
saccus, see SACK1)
~search-
to make thorough examination of; investigate; seek; probe;
scrutinize; to come to know; an exercise to show the right
to free speech through expression of research; Middle
English serchen, from Anglo-Norman sercher,
variant of Old French serchen, from Latin circāre,
to go around, from Latin circus, circle, from Greek
krikos, kirkos, [ref: search and seizure- see
human rights]
~shrink-
to become constricted from heat, moisture, or cold;
contract; a matter of reduction; recoil: "These are
the times that try men's souls. The summer soldier and the
sunshine patriot will, in this crisis, shrink from the
service of their country." (Thomas Paine - AHD); an
alarming drawback; ellipse; (see eclipse); to cause to
wither; relinquish; Middle English, shrinken, to
wither, shrivel up, from Old English scrincan After all this, you must be able to
"see the arch", and not the raven, and possibly the power
that can be geo-graphically used against you in your mind,
and reveal disorders in others who live by their ring. Also,
just to note the experience, I have mentioned previously
that many people have dug deep into the words and stories
they have told, and in this chapter, it seems obvious a
predominance exists with at least two or more who have
worked hard to tell their stories. The inspection was tied
to the myriad between the cove and bead, but leaning more
toward the Spanish inclination in the ogees, so this may
nail the tauro- root (mahatma*), as
toreutics is something worked in relief, and rooted to
terć-1- M*, the next mystery to
solve. |
Some of these descriptions include interpretations from the American
Heritage Dictionary of the English Language - 3rd Edition, and
the King James Version of the Holy Bible printed from 1970-1987
|
|
|