|
 
© ebookopen.com
Follow the sacred stone journey through the
sun into the Fourth House of Cancer.
This journey will end
in
Aquarius,
and the
perverse and rebellious Uranus,
and
then,
you'll be ready to go again,
I knew you'd show up", the
beast says. |
In search of - The Sapient Stone Language
Chapter Twenty Six: Milky Way
Reports Six more Roots from Heaven Captured
Current
hub,
index is being modified
|


 |
Keywords:
black lead, four-lettered word, 12
labors demanded by Hera, vowel mutations, water snake, water
serpent, wet season, one who wakes the dead, hole in the
ice, Ember day, day of Frigg, flock of nightingales, Venus's
day
|
|
"That [proclamation], of course, will not
wash." (John Hughes - AHD) |
|
Well, here we are again, and this chapter is not any less
exciting than the last, and to begin, we view an unusual group
with strange words and nested in the middle is the crab, of
which seems to have very little associated knowledge as compared
to the other 11 zoon-labors, but Hercules and Hydra were both captured, and
we'll have to find something to do with ourselves until we get
to Leo. That shouldn't be any problem, and I could use the extra
mental space to revise the index and repair earlier missing data.
Note, the bara index is
going to be stripped of all data except the keywords in each
group that are root marked, and all other data will now have to be
viewed in the chapters, or eventually PDF format, and the hub
will allow anyone to quickly get to the root information with
only a couple of clicks.
Here is the first group of six, and this is what I do on Monday
nights, normally.
Part one: Concordance
21-agrapha-anagram-carve-crab-crawl-crayfish-diagram-graffito
-gram1-grammar-graph-grapher-graphic-graphite-graphy-kerf
-paragraph-parallelogram-program-pseudepigrapha-tetragrammation
-et-gerbh-
to scratch, Old English- ceorfan, carve, cut,
Germanic *kerban, Old English- cyrf, kerf, a
cutting (off), from zero-grade Germanic form *kurbiz,
Variant form *grebh-, CRAB1, from Old English
crabba, a crab, Germanic *krab(b)-, Old
High German kerbiz, crayfish, edible crustacean, Germanic *krabiz-,
crawl, Old Norse krafla, to crawl, Germanic *krab-,
perhaps from gerbh-, Zero-grade form *grbh-,
AGRAPHIA, (EPIGRAPH), (ICONOGRAPHY),
(TOPOGRAPHY), Greek- graphein, to scratch, draw,
write, gramma (< *grbh-mn), a picture, written
letter, piece of writing, and grammē, a line,
concordance*,
(gram2 -
gre-no-) photo © R. Mark Sink "machinefish" |
~agrapha-
the sayings of Jesus not in the Bible, Greek, from neuter
plural of agraphos, unwritten : a-, not, see A-1, +
graphein, to write, [Note:
A-1 does reference this usage, however A-2
mentions the fact that the vowel A is meant to
be used before nouns or metaphors that designate an
unspecified person or thing, a proper name, number, amount,
quantity, or before what is called a mass noun, to
indicate a singular type or example, and is actually a
Middle English variant of an. The use of the vowel
A in front of words that are supposed to mean
(not) is problematic, and further examples will be sought.
Samples: agnosia, root
gnō-; ahimsa, root ne; amnesia
and amnesty, root men-1-
~anagram-
restructuring of a word of phrase into a different one,
reordering the letters in phrases or words, New Latin-
anagramma, from Greek anagrammatismos, from
anagrammatizein, to rearrange letters in a word : ana-,
from bottom to top + gramma, grammat-, letter
~carve- divide into pieces by cutting, slice,
parcel out, cut a desired shape, to make a form as if by
cutting, decorate by cutting, engrave, disjoint, Middle
English ceorfan, [ref:
polka partner carvacrol: aromatic compound (phenolic)
(herb), found in oregano, savory, New Latin carvi
(specific epithet of (Carum) carvi,
caraway, see root ak-]
~crab- CRAB1: predominantly ocean dwelling crustaceans of
the division of Brachyura within the order Decapoda,
characterized by a broad, flattened cephalothorax covered
by a hard carapace with a small abdomen concealed beneath
it, short antennae, and five pairs of legs, of which the
anterior pair are larger and pincerlike, hermit crab, king
crab, horseshoe crab; crab louse; scurry sideways,
adjustment in the wind to compensate drift; machine for
hoisting heavy material, Middle English crabbe, from Old
English crabba; CRAB2:
crab apple tree or its fruit;
quarrel-some, ill-tempered person, to find fault, criticize,
interfere with, ruin, spoil, to make sullen, same
roots
~crawl- CRAWL1: using the hands and knees to move slowly
along and close to the ground or floor, creep, advance
slowly, feebly, laboriously, frequent stops, feel or be
covered with moving things, teem, dragging the body along
the ground, extremely slow pace, the pace at which graphic
letters move across the screen when the film ends, Middle
English craulen, from Old Norse krafla; CRAWL2:
no derivative, screen enclosure in or under
water, to capture fish, turtles, Afrikaans kraal,
enclosure for animals, see kraal [ref:
kraal- South African: rural village often
surrounded with a type of fence preventing animals from
roaming, enclosure for livestock, Afrikaans, from Portuguese
curral, pen, perhaps from Vulgar Latin *currāle,
enclosure for carts, see corral]
◊~crayfish-
also crawfish, various freshwater crustaceans of the genera
Cambaras and Astacus, resembling a lobster but
considerably smaller, also called crawdad, see spiny
lobster, (Folk etymology from Middle English crevise,
from Old French crevice, perhaps from Old High German
krebiz, edible crustacean; Word History: The
crayfish, also known as the crawfish, owes its name to a
misunderstanding. The actual source of the word may be the
Old High German krebiz, "edible crustacean", or a
word related to it. From this Germanic source came Old
French crevice, which when taken into English became
the crevise (first recorded in a document written in
1311-1312). In Old French and Middle English these words
designated the crayfish. People began to pronounce and spell
the last part of this word as if it were fish
spelling (actually fysshes) being recorded in 1555.
Because of a variation in Anglo-Norman pronunciation, two
forms of the word have come down to Modern English:
crayfish and crawfish.
~epigram-
a short, witting poem expressing a single thought or
observation; concise, clever, often paradoxical statement,
saying, Middle English, from Old French epigramme,
from Latin epigramma, from Greek, from epigraphein,
mark the surface, inscribe
~diagram-
plan, sketch, or drawing, or outline designed to demonstrate
or explain how something works, or to clarify the
relationship between the parts to the whole; graphic
representation of an algebraic or geometric relationship,
chart or graph, indicator, Latin, from diagraphein,
to mark out, delineate : dia-, through, graphein,
to write
~graffito-
Usage problem: a drawing or inscription made on a
wall or other surface, usually so that it can be seen or
noticed, Plural: Graffiti, often used as singular presence,
Italian diminutive of graffio, a scratching,
scribble, possibly from graffiare, to scratch,
scribble, probably from Vulgar Latin *graphiāre, to
write with a stylus, from Latin graphium, stylus
~gram1-
metric unit of mass equal to one thousandth (10-3) of a
kilogram, French gramme, from Latin Latin gramma,
a small
weigh; -gram3-
suffix, something written or drawn, a record,
from gramma, letter; gram2- plants such as the
chickpea (Cicer arietinum)
garbanzo, bearing seeds widely used as
food in tropical Asia, seeds of such a plant, Obsolete
Portuguese, from Latin grānum, seed, see root
gre-no-, [ref:
legume, pea family, splits where two parts or valves are
attached at valve from split]
~grammar-
study of how words and their component parts combine to form
sentences, study of structural relationships in language, or
in a language sometimes including pronunciation, meaning,
and linguistic history; system of inflections, syntax, and
word formation of a language; system of rules implicit
in a language viewed as a mechanism for generating all
sentences possible in the language; normative or
prescriptive set of rules setting forth a standard,
pedagogical reference, judgment of these rules;
morphological, syntactical, and lexicon outlines for a
specific language, Middle English gramere, from Old
French grammaire, alteration of Latin grammatica,
from Greek grammatikē, from feminine of
grammatikos, of letters, from gramma, grammat-,
letter
~graph-
graph3: suffix
-graph, something
written or drawn, monograph, instrument for writing,
drawing, or recording: seismograph, keyboard, French
-graphe,
from Late Latin -graphus, from Greek -graphos, from
graphein,
to write; graph1:
(no derivative) a diagram that exhibits a relationship
between two sets of numbers as a set of points having
coordinates determined by the relationship, also called
plot, a pictorial device, such as a pie chart, used to
illustrate quantitative relationships, also called chart;
graph2:
(no derivative)
the spelling of a word, any of the possible forms of a
grapheme, written character that represents a vowel,
consonant, syllable, word, or other expression and cannot be
further analyzed, Greek graphē, writing
~grapher-
suffix, -grapher, one who writes about a specific
subject or in a specified manner, stenographer, from
Late Latin -graphus, from Greek -graphos
~graphic-
of or related to written representation, pictorial
presentation, represented by graph, description of vivid
detail, clearly outlined or set forth, related to graphic
arts, Geology: having crystals resembling printed
characters, imaging device, Latin graphicus, from
Greek graphikos, from graphē, writing, from
graphein, to write; Synonyms: lifelike,
realistic, vivid
~graphite-
soft, steel-gray to black, hexagonally crystallized
allotrope of carbon with a metallic luster and a greasy
feel, used in lead pencils, lubricants, paints, and
coatings, that is fabricated into a variety of forms such as
molds, bricks, electrodes, crucibles, and rocket nozzles,
also called black lead, plumbago
(leadwort),
Greek graphein, to write
~graphy-
suffix, -graphy, writing or representation produced
in a specified manner such as photography or
oceanography; representation of a specific object:
phonography, Latin -graphia, from Greek, from
graphein, to write
~kerf-
the amount of width made by the groove or notch in a cutting
tool: thin kerf, Middle English, from Old English
cyrf, a cutting, [Note:
reduction in kerf increases torque (reduces friction) in
certain circumstances, whereas in the way the cutter is
applied and the force used, the resulting torque is
transferred as energy in the form of vibration, which may
offset any perceived advantage as kerf as much to do with
weight.] [ref: polka partner
Keresan: languages spoken by
certain Pueblo people]
~paragraph-
distinction in division of written or printed matter that
begins on a new, usually indented line, consists of one or
more sentences, and typically deals with a single thought of
topic or quotes one speaker's continuous words; a mark (~)
used to indicate where a new paragraph should begin or to
serve as a reference mark; brief article, notice, or
announcement; divide or arrange into paragraphs, Middle
English paragraf, from Old French paragraphe,
from Medieval Latin paragraphus, from Greek
paragraphos, line showing a break in sense, or a change
of speakers in dialogue, from paragraphein, to write
beside
~parallelogram-
four-sided plane figure with opposite sides parallel, Late
Latin parallēlogrammum, from Greek
parallēlogrammom, from neuter singular of
parallēlogrammos, bounded by parallel lines :
parallēlos, parallel + grammē, line
~program-
listing of the order of events, pertinent information to be
presented, scheduled show, system of services, opportunity
or projects, academic study, ancillary activity, curriculum,
plan or system, coded instructions, procedure for solving
problems, instructional sequence, graphical computer
instruction, Late Latin programma, public notice, from Greek
programma, programmat-, from prographein, to write publicly
: pro-, forth (see PRO2) + graphein, to write,
[ref: PRO2 earlier, before, prior to:
procambium,
see root per-1-]
~pseudepigrapha-
spurious writings, especially writings falsely attributed to
biblical characters or times, body of text written
between 200 B.C. and A.D. 200
and spuriously ascribed to various prophets and kings of
Hebrew Scriptures, Greek, from neuter plural of
pseudepigraphos, falsely ascribed : pseudēs,
false + epigraphein, to write
~tetragrammation-
the four Hebrew letters usually transliterated as YHWH or
JHVH (Yahweh or Jehovah) used as a biblical proper name for
God, Middle English Tetragramaton, from Greek
tetragrammation, four letter word, from neuter of
tetragrammatos, four-lettered |
Agrapha rests with a group of words that use the
letter a in unexplained ways, and I will have to
search for more answers, as not only is the use confusing, the
concept of this title as a plural noun is even more confusing.
If you ask anyone for any of the sayings to read, it is
immediately invalid, and to boot, anyone who did possess the
data could not possibly be alive, so this raises more questions.
The word agnosia rests with the gnō-
root, and then we have the interesting agnomen,
which changes the use of the letter a to the
ad- prefix in an unknown way, and it is rooted with
nỗ-men-, which has a whacky dialect mark, so
maybe, I will be able to get to the bottom of the a
usury for this particular state of comparisons.
I don't know if this is just me, but
doesn't it seem like the pseudepigrapha pretty much validates
that a tetragrammation is foolery? We've already shown that
Yahweh is spelled backwards in the keyworded root group for those
letters.[ kau-
congas* (22)
] Trying to create anagrams from these letters doesn't have a
high priority, but the relationship to the amount of letters may
indeed be something related to four parts and each letter
representing one part. How important that actually is, may only
be a distraction.
As for the Cancer route, Hercules is the
next stop and the killing of the Hydra serpent of which just so
happens to resemble Medusa's head. In the story, Hercules is
covered in much myth, but you'll be happy to know that in this
chapter we made another jump on the map. You must read
all six parts. Originally, according to "Sun and Moon Signs" the
Cancer signal was known as the Stars of the Water, and
later was changed into "two turtles". Cancer was also known as
Al. lul, a water creature- "the wicked or
rebellious one", but also a bulog, the Crab or
Crayfish. And later it was even named the Tortoise of
which will be scanned for the next chapter.
Part two: Empyrean
Here's Tuesday rising left.
|

gradation : bolection
origin unknown
© ebookopen.com |
9-ablaut1-clio-hercules-leer-list1-listen-loud-umlaut1-sarod-et-kleu-
to
hear, Extended from *kleus-, Old English hlēor,
leer,
cheek, (< "side of the face" < "ear"), from Germanic *hleuza,
Zero-grade form *klu-, Old English
hlystan,
list, to listen, Germanic *hlustjan, Old English
hlysnan, to listen, Germanic- *hlusinōn, Suffixed
lengthened form *klū-to-, [Old English- hlūd,
loud, UMLAUT, Old High German- hlūt,
ablaut, sound, sourced
Germanic *hlūdaz, "heard", loud], Full-grade form *kleu-,
Suffixed form *klew-yo-, Greek kleiein,
clio, to praise, tell, Suffixed form *klew-es-, Latin Herculēs,
hercules, Greek Hēraklēs,
Hērakleēs, Suffixed form *kleu-to-, Old
Iranian srauta-, sarod, empyrean**,
bolection*
(ablaut2 -
apo-) (list2
- las-) (umlaut2 - ambhi-) |
~ablaut1-
Linguistics: a vowel change, characteristic
of Indo-European languages that accompanies a change in
grammatical function: for example, i, a, u, in sing, sang,
sung, also called gradation, German : ab-,
off (from Old High German aba; see apo-)
+ Laut, sound (from Middle High German lūt,
from Old High German hlūt
[ref: root apo-,
ebb, abaft, turned backward, alphabet**?]
~Clio-
Greek Mythology: the muse of history;
statuette awarded annually for outstanding achievement in
radio, and television advertising,
Latin, from Greek Kleiō, from Kleiein, to tell, [ref:
muse- guiding spirit, see root men-1-, summon, amnesia,
French toast*]
~Hercules-
also Heracles, or Herakles,
Greek & Roman Mythology: son of Zeus and Alcmene, a hero
of extraordinary strength who won immortality by performing
12 labors demanded by Hera; constellation in the Northern
Hemisphere near Lyra and Corona Borealis, Latin, from Greek Hēraklēs
: Hēra, Hera + kleos, fame
~leer-
to look with a sidelong glance, indicative especially of
sexual desire or sly and
malicious intent, desirous,
sly, or knowing look, Probably from Obsolete leer,
cheek, from Middle English ler, from Old English
hlēor [ref: cheek-
cool impertinence, temerity, impudent, saucy, Middle English
cheke, from Old English cēace]
~list1-
LIST4: Archaic: to listen,
or listen to, Middle English listen, from Old English
hlystan; LIST5:
to be pleasing, suit, to be disposed, choose, desire or
inclination, Middle English listen, to
desire,
please, from Old English lystan, [see root las-;
wanton, unruly, lustful], LIST1: no
derivative, series or
sequence of items written, printed, or imagined one after
the other, considerable number, itemize, register, recruit,
enlist; LIST2: no derivative, a narrow strip especially
of wood, Architecture: listel, border or
savage of cloth, strip or band of color, Often lists,
arena, area of controversy, ridge thrown up by plow,
boundary, border, furrow or plant land with a lister,
Middle English, from Old English līste;
LIST3: no derivative, inclination to one side,
tilt, lean or cause to lean to one side, [origin unknown] [ref:
listel- narrow border, molding, or fillet, also
called listen, French, from Italian
listello, diminutive of lista,
border, of
Germanic origin]
~listen- making an effort to hear something particular,
pay
attention, heed, "She encouraged me to listen carefully to
what country people called mother wit." (Maya Angelou -
AHD); hear a conversation, eavesdrop, tune in, Middle
English listenen, alteration of (influenced by listen, see
LIST4), of Old English hlysnan
~loud-
characterized by high volume and intensity, used of sound,
clamorous, insistent, offensive perception, bright colors,
strong odor or essence, loud manner, Middle English, from
Old English hlūd,
Synonyms: earsplitting, stentorium, strident, and
also see gaudy, shriek, screech
~umlaut1- Linguistics: a change in a vowel sound caused
by partial assimilation especially to a vowel or semivowel occurring in the following syllable;
vowel mutation,
diacritic mark (ö) placed over a vowel to indicate, German
um-, around, alteration (from Middle High German umb-, from
umbe, from Old High German unbi-, see root
ambhi-) + Laut,
sound (from Middle High German lūt, from Old High German
hlūt
~sarod-
also sarode, Music: many-stringed lute of northern
India that is played with a bow, Urda, from Persian
sarūd, from Middle Persian srōd, from Old
Iranian srauta- [ref: Urda- |
The way I seem to correlate Hercules has much to do with
Heracles, and the moving back and forth from masculine to
feminine and back. At least that's the animal house from the
Oracle for the moment. And King Eurysthesus was a real nutcase,
but we'll need to dig for more he says. The second thing he
wants done is for Hydra, a monster especially reared by the
goddess Hera to fight Hercules. Hydra supposedly looks like a
body of a dog with nine snaky heads, and one is immortal. We may
have already captured the eight suspects thanks to Sergeant
Friday which is covered in part six.
The word bolection is one strange word, as it sits
between bolide and bole which is the root
bhel-2-. We know that bolide is a hot fireball about to roast
your ass, but it is also something that is thrown. Our language
use is similar in the fact we make changes and throw them out at
people. These changes are subtly made, as in the gradation
method, and this is what the bolection molding does to the image
by removing the rough edges. This removal can hide a hell of a
lot. Each new word begins to possess its own portman over time
where the newer use is appropriated. It looks as though this
area will need a revisit.
The listel is another representation of what a
bolection molding would overlay. [ref:
listel- narrow border, molding, or fillet, also
called listen, French, from Italian
listello, diminutive of lista,
border, of
Germanic origin] It may be that the listel was the
original terminology for labeling, and the word bolection
was created in relation to unknowns related to remaining
uncompleted groups. A complete group of words that have no
origin is being compiled for more study, and sometimes clues can
be obtained from words that have been created for that purpose
alone.
A note on advertising: Those who create psychosocial
warfare for the mind deserve no award, but they master in
rearranging your wants, and any exposure, even for a few
seconds, can last a lifetime in your precious memory bank.
Part three: Snowmen Wednesday: Snow outlook
revised 2009JAN13
24-abound-anhydros-clepsydra-dropsy-hydathode-hydatid-hydra-hydro-hydrus
-inundate-kershwasser-otter-nutria-redundant-surround-undine-undulate
-usquebaugh1-utricle-vodka-wash-water-wet-winter-et-wed-1-
Water, wet, Suffixed o-grade form *wod-ōr,
Old English węter, water, Old High
German wassar, kershwasser, cherry-water, sourced Germanic *water,
suffixed lengthened-grade form *wed-o, Old
English węt, wēt, wet, Germanic *wēd-,
O-grade form *wod-, Old English węscan,
wascan, to wash, from Germanic suffixed form *wat-skan,
to wash, Nasalized form *we-n-d-, from
Old English winter, winter, Germanic *windtruz,
winter, "wet season", Suffixed zero-grade form *ud-ōr,
(HYDRANT), HYDATED, from Greek hudōr, water,
Suffixed nasalized zero-grade form *u-n-d-ā-, (REBOUND), Latin- unda, wave, Suffixed
zero-grade form *ud-ro-, *ud-rā-, water
animal, Old English otor, otter, Germanic *otraz,
otter, nutria, Latin- lutra, otter (with obscure
l-), Greek- hudros, hydrus, a water snake, Greek- hudra,
hydra, a water serpent, Hydra, Suffixed
zero-grade form *un-skio-, (WHISKEY), Old
Irish- uisce, usquebaugh, water, Suffixed o-grade form *wod-ā-, Russian- voda,
vodka, water,
nosos*, Snowmen*
(usquebaugh2
- gwei-) |
~abound-
fully supplied, filled, great number in amount, teem, Middle
English abounden, from Old French abonder,
from Latin abundāre, to overflow : ab-, away,
+ undāre, to flow
Comment: Notice the difference
in the ablaut effect in abound
as compared to agrapha and the other words
that used a as a means of not doing the jump,
so to speak.
~anhydros-
without water, especially water of crystallization, from
Greek anudros : an-, without + hudōr
~clepsydra-
ancient device that marked time by marking the regulated
flow of water through a small opening, also called water
glass, Latin, from Greek klepsudra : kleptein,
kleps, to
steal + hudōr, water [ref:
one example of a type of clepsydra is presented in the film, "Kill Bill,
V1", where the character played by (Lucy Liu, O-Ren
Ishii ) gets a flat top on the snow covered patio, and
you can hear the water flow being counted flip-pity-flop.]
~dropsy-
Edema, no longer in scientific use?, Middle English-
dropesie, short for idropesie, from Old French
ydropisie, from Medieval Latin ydrōpisia, from
Latin hydrōpsia, from Greek hudrōpiasis, from
hudrōps, dropsy, a dropsical person?, [ref:
edema- Pathology: excessive water accumulation
in body tissue or plant organs, Middle English ydema,
from Greek oidēma, a swelling, from oidein, to
swell]
Comment: The relationship
between the word dropsy and its sound usage
can now be correlated to the clepsydra, but more important,
one should note the polka partner to edema which is
the word Eden. Exactly what state a person
would be in to be considered dropsical, is quite open
and the fact that this word is being subjugated as useless;
I find this connection intriguing to say the least.
--Eden-
Garden of Eden, delightful place, a paradise, from Hebrew
'Ēden, from 'ēden, delight
--edentate-
lacking teeth, from Latin ēdentātus, past particle of
ēdentāre, to knock out
the teeth : ē-, ex-, ex- +
dēns, dent-, tooth
~hydathode-
water excreting microscopic epidermal structure in many
plants, Greek hudōr,
hudat-, water + hodas, way, road
~hydatid-
cyst formed as a result of infestation by larvae of the
tapeworm (Echinococcus grandulosus), Greek hudatis,
huditat-, watery vesicle
~Hydra-
Greek Mythology: multiple headed
monster slain by Hercules;
constellation in equatorial region of the southern sky near
Cancer, Libra, and Centaurus, also called Snake;
persistent or multifaceted problem that cannot be eradicated
by a single effort, Middle English- Idra, from Latin
Hydra, from Greek Hudra, Hydra, a watery
serpent
~hydro-
prefix, Water; hydroelectric; Hydrogen:
hydrochloride, drinking water;
Greek- hudro-, hudr-, from hudōr
~hydrus-
constellation in the Southern Hemisphere near Tucana and
Mensa, Latin, from Greek hudros, water snake
~inundate-
to cover with water, especially floodwaters, overflow,
overwhelm as if by flood, swamp, Latin inundāre,
inundāt- : in-, in + undāre, to surge (from
unda, wave)
~kershwasser-
cherry in water, (Kirsch- fermented brandy made from
cherries), German : Kirsch, cherry (from Middle High
German kļrse, from Old High German kirsa, from
Vulgar Latin *ceresia; see CHERRY) + Wasser,
water (from Middle High German wasser, from Old High
German wassar)
~otter-
any of the various aquatic, carnivorous mammals of the genus
Lutra and allied genera, related to the minks and
weasels and having webbed feet and dense, dark brown fur,
Middle English oter, from Old English otor
~nutria-
see coypu, the distinctive light brown fur of the
coypu, Spanish, from Vulgar Latin *nutria, variant of
Latin lutra, [ref:
coypu- rodent, (Myocastor coypus), webbed feet,
long tail, also called nutria]
~redundant-
exceeding what is expected,
superfluous, repetitive, verbose; electrical redundancy,
message transmission interference, Latin redundāns,
redundant-, present participle of redundāre,
to overflow : re-, red-, re- + undāre,
to surge (from unda, wave) [ref:
usage notes- critical condemnations,
consensus of opinion, close proximity, hollow tube,
refer back, and also: close, cross
section, mental telepathy,
rarely, refer]
~surround-
extended on all sides simultaneously, encircle,
enclose or confine on all sides, baring escape or
communication, fencing, border, environment, "It was
the country, flat agricultural surround, that so ravished
me." ( Listener - AHD), method of hunting,
Middle English surrounden, to inundate, from
Old French suronder, from Late Latin
superundāre : Latin super-, super- +
undāre, to rise in waves (from unda,
wave), Synonyms: circle, compass, encircle,
encompass, environ, gird, girdle, ring
~undine- According to Paracelsus,
a female water spirit who could
earn a soul by marrying a mortal and bearing his child, New
Latin undīna, from Latin unda, wave, [ref:
Paracelsus- Philippus Aureolus, (1493-1541),
German-Swiss alchemist and physician who introduced the
concept of disease to medicine. He held that illness was the
result of external agents attacking the body rather than
unbalances within the body and advocated the use of
chemicals against
disease-causing agents.
~undulate-
cause to move in a smooth wave-like motion, wavelike
appearance, move in waves, swing, increase and
decrease in volume, Late Latin undula, small wave
~utricle-
utricle1: membranous sac contained with the labyrinth of the
inner ear and connected with the semicircular canals,
Botany: small bladder-like one-seeded indehiscent fruit, as
in the amaranth, Latin utriculus, diminutive of uter,
utr-,
leather bottle, possibly from Greek hudria, water vessel;
utricle2: no derivative, small
vestigial blind pouch of the prostrate gland, Latin
utriculus, diminutive of uterus, uterus, womb
usquebaugh1-
Irish & Scots. Whiskey, Scottish Gallic uisge beatha
and Irish uisce beatha, water of life, whiskey
(translation of Medieval Latin aqua vītae)
: Old Irish uisce, water, (wed-1-) + Old Irish
bethad, genitive of bethu, life, [see root
gwei-, azoth, quiver, nimble, cysto**,
also see root kwes-; quarrel, etiolate*]
~vodka-
alcoholic liquor originally distilled from fermented wheat
mash but now also made from a mash of rye, corn, or
potatoes, Russian, diminutive of voda, water
◊~wash-
cleanse using water, using chemicals,
dipping, rubbing, scrubbing, soak, rinse out, make moist or
wet, drench; flow over, against, or past; carry, erode,
remove, purify with moving water, Chemistry: gas
purification by passage through water removing soluble
material, passing through a precipitate, separate
constituents by water agitation, undergo swirling, undergo
cleaning, "That [proclamation], of course, will not
wash." (John Hughes - AHD), sweep or beat with a
lapping sound, carried away by action of water, waste
liquid, swill, fermented liquid
from which liquor is distilled, coating a product, cosmetic
or superficial liquid, thin layer of water color or India
ink spread on a drawing, light tint or hue, recently eroded
debris, marshy ground; turbulent action in air or water
caused by motion of an oar, propeller, jet, or airfoil;
investment that breaks even, faded by laundering, depleted
of vitality, eliminated as unsatisfactory, rained out,
washing of the hands and face, ruin, finish, to be revealed
eventually, refuse responsibility, abandon, renounce, Middle
English washen, from Old English wascan
~water-
H20, colorless, odorless, tasteless liquid,
essential for organisms and
plants, most widely used solvent,
Freeze point, 32°F (0°C), boiling point 212°F, (100°C), body
of water, ocean, sea, lake, stream, river, any liquid that
contains or is principally water passed through the body,
amniotic fluid, womb, well,
uterus, urine, perspiration, tears, saliva,
excess greed or luster,
dilution, irrigation,
give a sheen to, reduced
difficulty, lack of rectification (water under the bridge),
Middle English, from Old English węter
◊~wet-
covered or soaked with liquid, such as water, not yet dry or
firm, stored or preserved in liquid, used or prepared with
water type liquids, rainy, humid, foggy, heavy
precipitation, allowing alcoholic beverages to be sold,
something that wets, moisture, snowy, dampen, becoming wet,
-idioms. all wet, wet
behind the ears, inexperienced, green, to take a
drink, wet (one's) whistle, Synonyms: damp, moist,
dank, humid
~winter-
considered to be the cold season, between autumn and spring,
extending to the Northern Hemisphere from the winter
solstice to the vernal equinox, 12/21 - 3/21, Middle
English, from Old English, Word History: Summer goes
back to the Indo-European root *sem-, meaning
"summer". From a suffixed form of this root came the
prehistoric Common Germanic word *sumaraz, the
ancestor of Old English sumor and its
descendent, modern English summer. This is the
only Indo-European root referring to a season that has
survived in an English name for a season. Of the three, *wesr-,
"spring" has produced words such as vernal, ghyem-;
"winter" has given us such words as hibernate, and
esen-; "harvest, fall," has yielded
earn (from the
prehistoric Common Germanic word *aznōn, "to
do harvest work, serve"). Winter does, however, go back to
the Indo-European root wed-, "water, wet."
From the form we-n-d- of this root with the
nasal infix -n- was derived the Germanic word *wintruz,
with the underlying meaning "wet season" and the literal
meaning "winter". The Germanic word is the source of Old
English winter, the ancestor of Modern English
winter.
Comment: The prefix root esen-
is in close lexicon association to the word essene
and essential. There are also many words that are
related to "winter" and their name that represent the winter herbs. |
I suppose you can see the relationship between the dropsy and the clepsydra, as
when the water fills up the body, the body reaches edema, and needs a dropsy to
release the extra water. It may be that the earth is also performing this
routine between the summer and winter solstices, and doing it on both sides
simultaneously, the same way the nightingale sings in the night to follow
analogically.
It looks as though the word winter is more about a wet season
than what is considered snow bells for sleighing. It may be that winter, the wet
season, is really emphasized on this pattern, and the summer would represent a
dryer season since heat would remove some of the water to make rain, and this
moisture would be carried far away toward the sun. As the hurricane season
approaches, the southwest part of the United States, as in Florida, is already
moving back to the north, as of June 21, the longest day of the year in the
Gregorian calendar tells us. Saturday is a great day to make a solar marker or
measuring device for the sun.
As July and August approach, the moister air that is above the Northern
Hemisphere is slowly being pushed down or relocated toward the south pole, as
the earth slowly tilts back up away from the sun. This may attribute to the
swirling storms created along the equator. We know they spin in opposite
directions for the seasons, and in the the Asian Pacific they have peaked
recently, which shows they peak at the end of their cycle just as the Florida
hurricane cycle peaks near the beginning of the winter solstice in Dec. 21,
ending only 21 days before this date. Strangely, these periods of weather seem
to intensify just before the two solstices reach their peaks and in mirror
fashion. The lesser solstices seem to be emphasized in our traditions and
religions, but when we follow the trial, it does get revealing.
The word nosis is Greek for disease, as the mashing of the wheat
and barely. This word is from the Pokorny word anthacnose, which I found
to be a frightening lead. The sound of kershwasser using cherries sounds
similar to wine pressing, so this does not seems dangerous, but could be harmful
if abused as fermentation, or becoming a drunk is one way our government and
others keep us in control. It provides a healthy number of sick people who need
to spend money, and provides hospitals with more patience. Alcoholism also
provides many other useful covers for reality.
Part four: Mecca extra
space
15-bivouac1-reveille-surveillant-vedette-vegetable-velocity-vigil-vigilante
-vigor-waft-wait-wake-waken-watch-witch-et-weg-
to be strong, be lively, Suffixed o-grade form *wog-ē,
wake1, Old English wacan, to wake up, arise, and
wacian, to be awake, from Germanic *wakēn,
Suffixed o-grade form *wog-no-, Old English
węcnan, węcian, waken, to awake, Germanic
*waknan, Old English węcnan, watch, to be awake, Germanic-
*wakjan, Suffixed form *weg-yo, (BEWITCH), Old English wicca, sorcerer,
wizard, (feminine wicce, witch), Germanic *wikkjaz,
necromancer (< "one who wakes the dead"), Old High
German wahta,
bivouac, watch, vigil, Germanic *wahtwō,
[Old North French waiter, wait, to watch, WAFT, Middle Dutch
and Middle Low German wachten, to watch, guard,
sourced *waht-], Suffixed (causative) o-grade form
*wog-eyo-, Latin vegēre, vegetable, to be lively,
Suffixed (stative) from *weg-ē, Latin
vigēre, vigor, to be lively, Suffixed form *weg-(e)li-,
Latin
vigil, reveille, surveillant,
vedette, vigil, vigilante, watchful, awake, Suffixed form *weg-slo-, Latin vēlōx,
velocity, fast, lively, measurement*, Ace of Spades*,
gale*, mecca* (bivouac2
- ambhi-) |
~bivouac1- temporary encampment, French,
from German dialectal beiwacht, supplementary night watch :
bei-, beside +
Wacht, watch, vigil (from Middle High German wahte,
from Old High German wahta, planet
interface*, see root ambhi-
~reveille-
defensive military formation, (commonly associated with the
bugle horn), signal to wake up, Alteration of French réveilez,
second person imperative plural of réveiller,
to wake, from Old French resveiller
: re-, re- + esveiler, to awake, from Vulgar
Latin *exvigilāre (Latin ex-, ex- + Latin vigilāre,
to stay awake), from vigil, awake
Comment: The word reveille sits
between Revelation and reveal, which should
make one
consider this location carefully. The closest derivative is
the word
revenant-et-gwa-; event, souvenir,
acrobat
~surveillant-
exercising surveillance, French, present participle of
surveiller, to watch over : sur-, over,
(from Old French; see SUR-), + veiller, to watch
(from Old French veillier, from Latin vigilāre,
from vigil, watchful)
Comment: This is what
journalism esteems instead of military physical
aggression
as a vedette for the next enemy where no defensive posture
is evident. Unfortunately, most of the journalists who are
in the lime light are unwilling to face the truth by
reporting it, which would in fact validate their idiocy and
corruption for such as with the Faux (Fox)
Channel and the ($20 Rupert Murdock essential-oil). Fox and
Exxon should get married.
~vedette-
mounted sentinel stationed in advance of an outpost, small
scouting boat for observation and reporting, French, from
Italian vedetta, alteration (influenced by vedere,
to see), of veletta, probably from Spanish vela,
watch, from velar, to watch, from Latin vigilāre,
to watch through the night, from vigil, awake
Comment: Comprehending this
state is both physical and spiritual, so one should take
notice of the possibilities, especially that of the relation
to the night. Also, our government abuses this concept by
building thousands of foreign bases that are now becoming a
nuisance. This is the extension of the beast and those who
dwell in the night.
~vegetable-
plant life that can be cultivated for the natural organic
production of fiber, fruit, and seeds that contain the
native ingredients necessary for a sustainable life; edible
plant, Medieval Latin vegetābilis, from Late Latin,
enlivening, from Latin
vegetāre, to enliven, from
vegetus, lively, from vegēre, to be lively
~velocity-
Physics: vector quantity whose magnitude is a body's
speed and whose direction is the body's direction of motion,
rate of speed of action or occurrence; rate of escaping
velocity, swiftness, Middle English velocite, from
Old French, from Latin vēlōcitās, from vēlōx,
vēlōc-, fast
~vigil-
devotion to "staying awake", observing, watching,
surveillant, used of
rituals related to religions,
Middle English vigile, a devotional watching, from
Old French, from Latin vigilia,
wakefulness, watch, from vigil, awake
~vigilante-
advocating or participating in
violence against perceived criminals, personal law
enforcement, law enforcement that advocates
violence by those who are
unqualified in any context,
Spanish, watchman, vigilante,
from Latin vigilāns, vigilant-, present
participle of vigilāre, to be watchful, from vigil,
watchful
Comment: the upscale use of
violence by
peace officers is alarming and
a sign of the beast. This concept again can be applied to a
spiritual reckoning.
~vigor-
physical and/or mental (fire/spiritual/intellectual)
strength, energy, or force; capacity for natural growth,
strong feelings, enthusiasm or intensity, validly,
Middle English, from Old French, from Latin vigor, vigōr-,
from vigēre, to be lively, Synonyms: dash,
punch, verve, vim, vitality
~waft-
cause to go gently and smoothly though the air or over
water, send or convey over water or through the air, float
easily and gently as if on air, drift, carried through the
air, light breeze, fluttering or waving, flagging wind
direction, also called waif, [Back-formation
from wafter, convoy ship, alteration of Middle
English waughter,
from Middle Dutch or Middle Low German wachter, a
guard, from wachten, to guard, [ref:
waif- ownerless property, root weip-]
◊~wait-
rest in expectation, stay,
tarry until another arrives, remain
ready, remaining neglected,
to wait on patrons, waiter, delay an event, to let time
pass, attend to others, to formally call upon,
anticipation,
pause, Middle English waiten,
from Old North French waiter, to watch
Comment: All traditional
objectives on the meaning of this word are a wash.
◊~wake-
wake1: becoming awake, staying awake, brought into a
state
of awareness, keep watch or guard, rouse from sleep, to stir
from dormancy, keep vigil, see regional entry ◊viewing,
festival for esteemed person, annual spree, Middle English
wakein, waken, from Old English wacan, to wake
up, and wacian, to be awake, keep watch; wake2:
no derivative, turbulence left by swift movement
through air or water, vapor trail, a track or course,
consequence, Possibly from Middle Low German, hole in the
ice, of Scandinavian origin, akin to Old Norse vök; Usage
Note: The pairs wake, waken, and
awake, awaken have formed a bewildering array
since the Middle English period. All four words have similar
meaning, though there are some differences in use. Only wake
is used in the sense "to be awake" as in expressions like
waking (not wakening) and sleeping, every
waking hour. Wake is also more common than
waken when used together with up; and awake
and awaken never occur in this context. [..]
Note: Regional American
dialects tend to alter the sound of vowels and verbiage
differently than Southern dialects which emphasize past
tense alterations. The terms awake and awaken are more
commonly used, and this may be due to their portmanteau
feelings.
~waken-
rouse from sleep, awake, arise, rouse from quiescent or an
inactive state, Middle English wakenen, from Old
English węcnan
~watch-
look or observe attentively or carefully, closely observant,
wait expectantly,
anticipation, act as spectator,
look upon, keel vigil, tend to a flock, mentally alert,
surveillance, guard or protect, sentinel, division of
time aboard ship, period of wakefulness, portable timepiece,
chronometer, flock of nightingales, proceed with
caution, behave as demanded,
Middle English wacchen, from Old English węccan,
to watch, Synonyms: tend, flock
Comment: The reference
to Nightingale is seemingly a direct reference to a person,
Florence Nightingale (1820-1910 as "Lady with the Lamp,
1854"), who organized units of field nurses in the British
related Cremian War and is the founder of the nursing
concept according to sources. There is also the (Luscinia
megarhynchos) which is referred to as Nightingales, and
are nocturnal song birds where males sing in the
night, see root ghel-1-; lesser
celandine, spring*
~witch- dowse (physical or spiritual, good or evil), a craft,
Middle English wicche, from Old English
wicce, witch, and wicca, wizard,
sorcerer, [ref: dowse-
origin unknown; physical interpretation:
searching for water underground; spiritual interpretation:
searching for a connection home]
Comment: This definition has
been updated and the bigoted interpretation removed. There
is no reason why this progression must be perceived to be
feminine or masculine, but rather either, and or both, and
also on many levels not normally recognized. The polka
partner to the word witch is none other than
the word witan which is actually
witenagmot, which has two derivatives, kom-
and
weid-
spice melonge (25)
Also, it should be noted that attempting a
craft may have poor intentions, and with the added mystic,
additional unnecessary labeling occurs, however, there are
those who would abuse this power for evil alone. |
Why do you think the guberment is hurriedly installing cameras
in every crook and cranny? Control of their interests only. This
is simply the implementation of a police state, or hierarchy of
empirical rule. Those who assume this is useful for society, are
already in the wash, and have hung themselves out to dry. The
individual can however instill surveillance to protect oneself
from those who have been turned into beef jerky. This is
obviously associated with the physical reality, but it is also
associated with the spiritual reality.
In reference to dowsing, one can only assume from
history and the horrible record of atrocity against women by
men, that the use of the word witch was attached
similarly to the way the bolection molding works, covering both
sides of the issue, and turning it into twisted soup.
Any time a women in history attempted to contact the spirit
world in her own house, she was immediately burned or worse. Any
time a priest has oral sex with boys, a few more are hired or
replaced. We do have a serious infestation of the beast as the
justifiable and moral offenses are day and night. The beast
revels at the way the troops line up to service the most
powerful. I do find the reference to Florence Nightingale
important, as if those oral priests were fighting in the fields
and might want to consider the fact that finding the spirit is
not a one way street. But in this chapter, we have set a be line
straight to joy, and the watery spirit of Cancer and the
beginning of Summer, but winter is the dominant object. More
flip-flop or is there another message?
There is also the reference to the root ghel-1-; lesser
celandine, spring* It could be said that Spring and Fall are
emphasized inclusive of this concept, and the singing birds on
the Ace of Spades that contains the watchtower in the center is
a representation of the two birds, one female, and one male who
sings in the frightful night. If this is so, it matches the
mapping system to a T, as the Heaven and Fear are on the left as
the dark sun or father, and the female is on the right, matching
the swallows call, and you have yourself a bivouac of love. The
root for celandine looks small, and I will attempt to add it to
the bottom of this chapter.
Also, to mention, if you have a deck of
cards, or you can copy and blow up the image above to see it,
the watchtower looks more like a windmill. Now, let's see the
rest of your bivouac. Watch out for that snake in the Bud.
Part five: Bebe
Thursday: Looks like a forest
11-abaft1-ambi-ambulate-be1-beleaguer1-bivouac2-by-ember
day1
-funambulist-ombudsman1-umlaut2-et-ambhi- Also
mbhi-, around, Probably
derived from ant-bhi, see ant-, Reduced
form *bhi-, BY1, abaft, Old English
bi, bī,
be, by; Old English- be-, on all sides, be-, also
intensive prefix; beleaguer, Middle Dutch bie, by,
bivouac,
Old High German bi, by, at, all sourced Germanic *bi,
*bi-,
(intensive prefix), [Old English ymbe, ember day, around,
Old Norse um(b), ombudsman, about, around, Old High
German umbi, umlaut, around, all sourced Germanic *umbi], AMBI-,
Latin ambi-, around about, ALLEY1,
(PREAMBLE), Latin- amb-, around, about, in ambulāre, to go
about, walk (*alāre, to go), AMBHI- Greek-
amphi, around,
about (see ag-), Celtic *ambi,
agility*, Bebe* (abaft2 -
apo-)
(be2 -
bheuę-) (beleaguer2
- legh-) (bivouac1
- weg-) (ember
day2 - rei-)(umlaut1 - kleu-)
(ombudsman2 - bheudh-;
Bodhisativa2, Buddha) (ombudsman3
- man-1-; mannequin) |
~abaft2-
(adverb: in relation to + verbum, word)
Nautical: toward the stern, (prepositions: post positioning:
apo-, application omega) toward the stern
from, Middle English on baft : on, at; see ON- +
baft, to the rear (from Old English beęftan,
behind : be, by, at;
ambhi-)
+ ęftan, behind, see apo-
~ambi-
prefix, Both, ambiversion, Latin- around, (marker for
root ambhi-), [ref:
ambidextrous- Latin- ambi-, on both sides +
dexter, right-handed?, see root for
ambient,
ei-
the joker (14)]
~ambulate-
to walk from place to place, walkabout, move about, Latin-
ambulāre, ambulāt-,
to walk
~be1-
prefix, completely,
thoroughly,
excessively, used as
an intensive: bemuse; on, around, over:
besmear; used to form transitive verbs, as: to make,
cause to become: behim; to affect, cover, or
provide: bespectacled, Middle English bi-,
be-, from Old English be-, bi-, also
see root be2
- bheuę-
Comment: Bemuse:
cause to be bewildered, confused; Besmear: make
filthy, smear; Behim:
bēhēmā, beast; Bespectacled: wearing eye glasses,
as if you have already spoke, but you haven't. The note
section on be2
is a mile long with arguments about they, them,
verbiage use, we, me, and so on, so it would
be best if it is added here when the other root is
completed. The closest derived rooted words to be
are the words, bazaar, root
wes-3- on one side, and beacon, root
bhā-1- on the other. An
additional important reference is the word behest
(authoritative command) which is
connected to the root kei-2-: colonel, column, dowry**, and
date, endow, dacha, root dō-, boule*
~beleaguer1-
to harass, beset, surround with
troops, besiege,
Probably Dutch belegeren : be-, around (from Middle
Dutch bie) + leger,
camp, see root legh-; outlaw, lair, lie
~bivouac2-
(same as 1) temporary encampment, French,
from German dialectal beiwacht, supplementary night watch :
bei-, beside +
Wacht, watch, vigil (from Middle High German wahte,
from Old High German wahta, planet
interface*, see root weg-
Comment: Please note
the word bi- has a root dwo-
amino (18)
~by- BY1-
preposition, close to, next to, up to and beyond,
past, in the period of, during, to the extent of, according
to, in the name of, indication of succession, used with
measurements, on hand, nearby, aside, away, up to,
along-side, into the past, Middle English, from Old English
bī, be; BY2-
variant of bye
~Ember
day1-
a special day reserved for fasting by some Christian
religions, observed on a Wednesday, Friday, and Saturday,
after the first Sunday of what is referred to as Lent, after
Whitsunday, and after the Gregorian September 14, and just
previous the winter solstice (21st) on December 13, Middle English
ymer daye, from Old English ymbrendęg :
ymbryne, recurrence, course of time, (ymbe,
around, see ambhi- + ryne, a running, see root rei-
+ dęg, day)
~funambulist- one who performs on a tightrope or slack rope,
from Latin fūnambulus : fūnis, rope +
ambulāre, to walk
Comment: The closest
derivatives to the word fun are fumitory, root
ters- and fumigate, root ag-,
and clear on the other side is the word fur, root
pā-
~ombudsman1-
one who is hired to investigate complaints, report findings,
and often mediates settlements between parties for corporate
interest, government official, Scandinavian, investigator of
citizens, Swedish, from Old Norse umbodhsmadhr,
deputy, plenipotentiary : umbodh,
commission (um, about, see ambhi- + bodh,
command, see bheudh- + madhr,
man, see man-1-, administration by
delegacy; Word History: [..] In 1809 the office of
riksdagens justitieombudsman was created to act as an
agent of justice, that is, to see after the interests of
justice in affairs between the government and its citizens.
This office of ombudsman and the word ombudsman have
been adopted elsewhere, as in individual states in
the United States. The term has also been
expanded in sense to include people who perform the same
function for business corporations or newspapers. [ref:
Cointelpro, CIA, etc. and root pelę-1-,
groundkeeper*]
~umlaut2-
(same as 1) Linguistics: a change in a vowel sound caused
by partial assimilation especially to a vowel or semivowel occurring in the following syllable;
vowel mutation,
diacritic mark (ö) placed over a vowel to indicate, German
um-, around, alteration (from Middle High German umb-, from
umbe, from Old High German unbi- + Laut,
sound (from Middle High German lūt, from Old High German
hlūt, see root kleu- |
The first oddity I noticed with this group was the definition
for, [ref:
ambidextrous- Latin- ambi-, on both sides +
dexter, right-handed?,
which is senseless. Why on earth would you tell someone that
when you have a tendency to use both sides of your body equally,
you are navigating to the right side only? It is true that tools
and everyday utensils are all geared for one type of use, and
corporations can increase profits by not abiding the body
division which has already been utilized for training in schools
where one hand was chosen as a predominant. For myself, I never
could get it right. When I was younger and more socially active,
I did everything backwards, golfed right-handed, wrote
left-handed, and can catch or throw any ball with any hand.
Being left-handed, this is what can happen.
On the lighter side, with the group above,
new records have been set for words with triple root markers,
and groups with the most derivative cross referencing. Bebe
would easily win an Oscar for most Bespectacled Summer
word-movie. Now, let's take a look at our psyche a bit closer.
We do have a battle of sorts between two
sides, and the relation to Ember day can be worked out in your
mind by following the rest of this chapter, and viewing both the
navigator-on PDF and the revised noesis map PDF. You can begin
to see the relationship, and most interestingly, the seasons,
and the days of the week are looking quite impressive for a
first entry. So it seems the immortal Odin is waiting in the
mist. Well, here are eight more rascals that have been
interrogated and set free.
Part six: Heracles Greek Hēraklēs Friday finally arrived.
8-affray-afraid-free-freebooter-friend-frigg-friday-siegfried1-et-prī-
to love, contracted from *prię, suffixed form
*priy-o-, [Old English frēo, free, and
frēon, freogan, to love, set free,
(FILIBUSTER), Dutch- vrij, free,
sourced Germanic *frijaz], beloved, belonging to the
loved ones, not in bondage, free, and *frijōn,
to love, Suffixed (participial) from *priy-out-,
loving, Old English- frīond, frēond,
friend, Germanic- *frijand-, lover, friend, Suffixed
shortened form *pri-tu-, SIEGFRIED, Old High German-
fridu,
peace, [Old French- esfreer, affray, afraid, to disturb,
Vulgar Latin- *exfredāre, to break the peace, from
ex-, out, away], (see eghs) + fridāre, to make
peace, Germanic *frithu-, peace; (see bhergh-2-),
Germanic compound *berg-frij-, "high place of safety",
from *frij-, peace, safety, all sourced Germanic *frithuz,
peace, Suffixed feminine form *priy-ā, beloved, Old Norse Frigg,
Frigg, goddess of the heavens, wife of
Odin, Old English Frīgedęg, Friday, Germanic
compound- *frijedagaz "day of Frigg"
(translation of Latin Veneris diēs,
"Venus's day), sourced *frijjō, beloved, wife,
Heracles* (siegfried2
- segh-) photo © NASA |
~affray-
noisy quarrel, brawl, Archaic: to frighten, Middle
English, from Old French effrei, esfrei, from
esfraier, esfreer, to disturb
~afraid-
filled with fear, feelings of aversion, unwillingness,
filled with regret or concern, Middle English affraied,
past participle of affraien, to frighten, Old French
esfraier, esfreer, to disturb, of Germanic
origin, [ref: after-et-apo-;
this is the closest root to afraid on one side, on the other
is affusion-et-gheu-, confuse, untrustworthy,
scarecrow*, which is drenching oneself in the Frig water.
This water is joy and the white horse, see extended
comments. Also, the root gheu(ę)
is the neighbor representing god, giddy, convoluted*]
~free-
not imprisoned or enslaved, being at liberty, at
control of freewill, the ability to choose, not subject
to the liberator or the annihilator*, consent of peace,
government as peace keeping, not restricted, exempt in
certain conditions, "Comment is free but facts are
sacred." (Charles Prestwich Scott - AHD), not
occupied, costing nothing, gratuitous, unobstructed, more
open, frank, done of one's own accord, voluntary,
spontaneous, unconstrained, unconfined, not chemically
bound, involving no collisions, empty, favorable, not
attached, unchecked vowel as in the word go, without
charge, to set at liberty, make free, relieve of a
burden, remove obstructions or entanglements, Middle English
fre, from Old English frēo.
V., from Middle English freen, from Old English
freōn, to love, set free
~freebooter-
a person who pillages and plunders, a pirate, Dutch
vrijbuiter, from vrijbuit, plunder : vrij,
free + buit, booty (from Middle English būte,
of Middle Low German origin)
"America...is the freest and wealthiest nation in the world"
(Rudolph W. Giulliani - AHD)
~friend-
a person who one presumably knows, likes, or trusts; a
feeling of acquiescence with another, alliance, comrade,
companion, favoring, befriending, [ref:
see mob, emotion,
meuę-
regal (22), and root
pā-, repast the bread*, Helen of Troy**]
~Frigg-
Mythology: The Norse goddess of the
heavens and wife
of Odin, Old Norse. [ref: polka
partner fright (fear), Old English fyrhto,
fryhto. V.?]
[ref: Odin- see root
wet-1-, Wednesday?, Maya*]
Comment: That's the second V
with no mention of meaning. We may have an A-frame in the
works. Also, the word fryhto almost sounds
like a product name for chips (Frito Lay), is also suffixing
the sound for Friday.
~Friday-
sixth day of the week, Middle
English Fridai, from Old English Frīgedęy,
[Friday, Germanic
compound- *frijedagaz "day of Frigg"
(translation of Latin Veneris diēs,
"Venus's day), sourced *frijjō, beloved, wife]
~Siegfried1-
warrior hero of the Nibelungenlied and other
Germanic medieval epics whose story is essentially that of
the Norse prototype Sigurd, German, from
Middle High German Sīfrit, from Old High German
Sigifrith : sigu, victory
+ fridu, peace, [see root segh-, epoch,
entelechy, Hyperborean*]
Comment: Victory may designate
the initial V. by instilling the scholar in the right path,
versus the right side per se. |
Envy and fear. That's who breaks the peace, according to the
research brought forth, although admitting, this needs more
organizing, this work is again beginning to validate the
correlations made from the diction alone, and through the path.
All the words we use, especially those that hold the most
essence for what they actually represent, are coded into a map,
and I have finally taken the risk of adding the days of the week
into the schematic for stigma, and they are seeming to be
correct.
To subject on the order, since Tuesday and Zeus were among the
same root group, along with Deus, this was the focus for Spring
and the Aries Fire for Envy's position. Being a little uncertain
about this prediction of information, Thursday and Thor are
assuming Libra for the moment, and Wednesday and Odin sit in the
top position. One the lower deck, Hercules and Heracles mix and
match the week, winter for Capricorn and the dreary Monday,
while Friday and Cancer freeze the water for the week.
You begin your day on a dreary Monday. By Tuesday, you are
beginning to spring up. On Wednesday, you feel over the hump. On
Thursday, you begin to fall into the weekend.
By
Friday, joy arrives like a warm breeze, but your frozen in half?
You must journey over and through the ember, and back twice, and
then you start a new week.
It's the craziest thing I've ever said. We'll need to take a
closer look at Saturday and Sunday. Also, it looks as though the
Mayan Solar Day Symbols are hinting about this weekly
information. I hope you are looking forward to the next chapter
in a more or less undulated teem, as I am.
View updated noesis map
here
in PDF.
The navigator is linked at top of page directly to the PDF.
R. Mark Sink 28.6.20
published 2008/06/20
Winning anagram award this chapter: This
is a usual practice, to see more, they are listed on the home page linked at the
bottom of this page.
hole in the ice
1. Hi! Entice hole!
2. Eh? Incite hole!
3. Eh.. Ice hotline?
4. Oh! Hence it lie!
5. Ice eh? Then oil!
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chapter..
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