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Ambrosia |
death head: kimi
belladonna: deadly nightshade |
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"Vague . . forms of speech . . have so long
passed for mysteries of science." (John Locke - AHD)
Chapter 67: Ambrosia: The AYN Sleeping
Car
May 1: 2009: Get your Wyatt Erp hats on. Or, how about
Wyatt Eros, since there is no P in error. The jump from the
weik-1-
mensa (47),
to
weik-2-
linotype (33),
may rest in the examination of the fundament, or buttock. This
is also associated with elephant poop, and those who attempt to
feed you with the swill of elemental particles. A good example
would be orthography, of which I intend to completely absorb,
and as a warning, without breaking this sea biscuit up, we may
continue to eat the slop presented.
Since I am constantly looking for clues, I do occasionally
subject. The reduction of the weight of knowledge is sewn by the
columbine, a dove on the surface, but actually an eagle, and
represented as carrying the rod viruses emulated in last
chapter. The lessening of weight seems to begin with the elater,
or the feeling of getting something done, if anything at all,
and masked by illation, and the long distance phone call made in
the mind. From here, conscience and the ale from
alu- agent orange* make up the pathos for
the day. Between this, rests the hell bound train that
transudes.
Ahead: One question that comes to
mind with hundreds of thousands of words to discern, how is the
shrugging orphan installed from the orbh- gordian
knot*? Is it from wekti-
metonymy (62)?
The large bird sits on the egg as or-
chasuble*, and the orthoepy is nested with
wekw-
MksA*, which may need a new
name, or one that can be understood.
The customizations it seems are hiding the
feelings of the true associations, which then immediately
awakens the observer.
Here are the proems that were selected a
week ago and this week's mermaid.
mer- elemental*, (REM signal disrupter;
mercy seat; occiput-op)
sweid- lily* (brain-sweat; sea water-id)
ked- hyades***
s(w)eks limen* (threshold of response;
heartbeat) yin/yang
swel- limpet* (am signal: detonates on
contact)
Part one:
Elemental
25-amaranth-ambrosia-amortize-amrita2-immortal-manticore1-marasmus-morbid
-mordacious-mordant-mordent-moribund-morsel-mort-mortal-mortar-mortgage-mortify
-mortuary-murder-murrain-nightmare-postmortem-premorse-remorse-et-mer-
Section one: to rub away, harm; Old English- mare,
mære, nightmare,
goblin, incubus, Germanic- *marōn-, goblin; MARASMUS;
AMARANTH, Greek- marainein, to waste away, wither;
Probably suffixed zero-grade form *mr to-,
"ground down", Latin- mortārium, mortar;
Possibly extended root *merd-, MORDACIOUS, MORDANT,
MORIDENT, MORSEL; PREMORSE, REMORSE, Latin- mordēre,
to bite; Possibly suffixed form *mor-bho-, Latin-
morbus, morbid, disease (but this is more likely of
unknown origin); Section two: Possibly the same root,
but more likely distinct, is *mer-, "to die," with
derivatives referring to death and human beings as subject
to death; Zero-grade from *mr-; suffixed form *mr-tro-,
Old English- morthor, murder, Germanic-
suffixed form *mur-thra-; suffixed from *mr-ti-,
MORT1, MORTAL, AMORTIZE, MORTIFY, POSTMORTEM, Latin- mors
(stem mort-), death; suffixed form *mr-yo-,
MORIBUND, MORTUARY, MURRAIN, MORTGAGE, (MORTMAIN), Latin-
morī, to die, with irregular past participle
mortuus (< *mr-two-), replacing older *mr-to-
(for which see next section); prefixed and suffixed form
*n-mr-to-," undying, Latin- immortālis, immortal
(*n-, negative prefix; see ne); Greek-
ambrotos, ambrosia, immortal, divine (a-
+ -mbrotos, brotos, mortal); Sanskrit
amrtam, amrita, immortality (a- + mrta-,
dead); Suffixed o-grade form *mor-t-yo, Greek
mantikhōras, manticore (corupted from martiokhōras),
manticore, probably from Iranian compound *martiya-khvāra-,
"man-eater" (khvāra-, eating; see swel-),
Old Persian- martiya-, a mortal man [Pokorny 4.
mer-, 5. mer- 735] elemental* (from funda-mental*)
(amrita1
- ne) (manticore2
- swel-) |
~amaranth-
(no-min belladonna;
deu-2-
peace pipe (13))
any of the various annuals of the genus Amaranthis having
dense green or reddish clusters of tiny flowers and
including several weeds, ornamentals, and food plants; an
imaginary flower that never fades; Color: a deep
reddish purple to dark grayish, purplish red; a dark red to
purple azo dye; New Latin amaranthis, genus name,
alteration of Latin anarantus, from Greek
amarantos, unfading : a-, not; see A-1 +
marainein, to wither
 \~ambrosia-
(one-sided spiked no-men) Greek & Roman Mythology:
the food of the gods, thought to confer immortality;
something with an especially delicious flavor or fragrance;
a dessert containing primarily oranges and flaked coconut,
Latin, from Greek, from ambrotos, immortal,
immortalizing; a-, not; see A-1 + -mbrotos,
mortal
~amortize-
(de-ceased frequency analyzer; K-ED) a form of imaginary
liquid attachment (debt, such as a mortgage) which then
feeds once installed filling a (sinking fund; coffer;
hour-glass) which is then made available to others as food
(write-off) to enhance its image, Middle English
amortisen, to alienate in mortmain, from Old
French amortir, amortiss-, from Vulgar Latin
*admortīre, to deaden
: Latin ad-, ad- + Latin mors, mort-,
death
The westerner is the Amorite from
Hebrew 'ěmōri, which seems an emitter for (ei-
the joker (14))
who is missing one shoe. The am- prefix is also
emitting (not-m) in effect
using w as the vehicle. One wonders if this is the giant
a-moral mirror that is shot into your arm as Cupid. The
mortmain is the perpetual and institutional ownership
of (value in earthly desires), from the root man-2-
greengage*. The truth however may be that it is monitored by
the largest hole in the head opposite the beauty spot.
 /~amrita-
(one-sided spiked no-men) Mythology: the ambrosia,
prepared by the Hindu gods, that bestows immortality; the
immortality that is achieved by drinking this substance,
Sanskrit amrtam : a-, without; (see
ne- Genghis khan*)
+ mrtam, death, see mer-
~immortal-
(im-mort-al:
deu-ter disease activator) an asinine belief that a
human body does not eventually rot: immortal madness;
immortal vivisection; the asinine belief that the
body represents the almighty: immortally dead;
immortally entombed; Biology:
a virus that is already dead where the illusion of life
exists: immortal cell cultures; immortal
replication; the subjective adherence to immanent
remains: the body of death was immortally engraved;
an enduring disease of the pass; fame (see
bhā-2- arum lily*)
Middle English, from Old French immortel, from Latin
immortālis
The beasts are clever, and install
the amazing art nouveau
that sheep jump completely over, and attempt to lock in the
hour glass, as though time exists
without proof. Then, you can feed from the tower of hell. It
is true that people live on, but only in memory, something
that is restricted to the minds that live on, not the body.
The rum overflows as red out the nouveau as art. The first
mort is the sound of death for a deer, and the second is
defined as a great number. This is simply the mortar, or
Satan harmony of bombing and killing innocent people in the
name of Satan as God, and held in place by silly laws of
orthography. This conversion is exemplified by the beasts
attempt to collect data in overwhelming amounts in an
attempt to immortalize Satan. Immortal is nothing but a
fools attempt to bond the body to the mind, in effect,
telling you that in all of the entire universe, this is as
good as it gets. Take a gander at the spinners of
myrrh beginning with: (s)mer-1-
MEM (23)
and
(s)mer-2- emeris
(23).
Although ISZ needs work, there is a difference between
gathering-good, and good-together. This is the simple ged:
ghedh-
corymbe (32)
~manticore1-
(message in a bottle) a legendary monster having the head of
a man, the body of a lion, and the tail of a scorpion,
Middle English manticores, from Latin mantichōra,
from Greek mantikhōras, variant of martiokhōras,
from Old Iranian *martiya-khvāra-, man-eater : *martiya,
man; akin to Old Persian martiya-, man, see mer-
+ khvāra-, eater; akin to Avestan khvar-, to
eat, see
swel- limpet* (am signal: detonates on
contact)
The spreading snake well and ulcer
no-men is associated with the root
nem- ghillie*.
This is also the second dew as (dheu-2-
butte (66)),
or that of the tail of the scorpion, and building of the
free virgin, and absorbed as the second economy, allotted as
red rum. the no-mad wanders in search of pasture, amiss to
the message sent causing the mar-as-mus, or muscle of the
beast envy.
~marasmus-
(no-men negatron) Pathology:
a progressive wasting of the body of a planetary species
inclusive of the primary living beings either by
malnutrition (developing antism), propaganda (acceptable
knowledge), torture (war and famine), and/or mental diseases
associated with living beings that are in the prolific
(blossoming) stage of living, New Latin, from Greek
marasmos, from marainein, to waste away
The neighbors in lex begin with the word many,
from menegh- fructify*,
and as the pass is made: Matthew 22.14 states, "For many are
called, but few are chosen." This is analogous to jumping
over the Maple tree, thought to be the Acer saccharum,
but the word Maple is actually more like an ampule,
as it is from Old English mapul-, as in
mapultrēo. The sugar is assumed to be over the
bridge analogous to the jump program if inapt (SS) but it
seems the mapul-, or may-pull, or pole, is the target
for manipulation. (Reference: Mathew: 21:42: ...the stone
that the builders rejected. The same has become the head of
the corner..20:19:...and the third day he shall rise again.)
~morbid-
(mor^dib) of, related to, or in the pursuit of more which
has caused pathological disease (reference clock, 9/3);
"He suffered much from a morbid acuteness of the senses."
(Edgar Allan Poe - AHD); psychologically unhealthy or
unwholesome: the morbid trail of
suicides from military time; characterized by
preoccupation with unwholesome thoughts or feelings:
watched morbid pundits;
gruesome; grisly: the three-brained beings had a morbid
and bloody brain; Latin morbidus, diseased, from
morbus, disease
For the morganites, morgen rests on top of the morgue,
and is equal to 2.1 acres, which just happens to be 9
o'clock. Between here and noon is 3 hours, and the number
changes to 12. These 3 hours are of particular interests in
the lex, especially in relation to Ovid's metamorphoses. The
word morn rests between this, and is defined as morgen.
Morgen is also the amount of land that can be plowed in the
morning, from morghen, with an h. To see the symbol
for Cancer, turn the clock to the left 3 hours. These
symbols may actually represent yin and yang, but have been
used specifically for numeration which leads out of the
Deuteronomy of the dead. To say the numeration 1 is 2 is
correct. To say, 2 is 1 is incorrect. Thus, Gregorian time
gives you 2 is 1, or two sets of 12.
~mordacious-
(flexible concrete; ayn; yewes-)
given to biting; may cause blood; caustic; sarcastic; Latin
mordāx, mordāc- (from
mordēre, to bite + -IOUS)
~mordant-
(rob-in-hood: azo dye; not + life) biting sarcasm: the
security was mordantly caustic; incisive and trenchant:
the mordant purple-people eater; serving to fix
colors in dyeing; a reagent, such as tannic acid, that fixes
dyes to cells, tissues, or textiles or other materials; a
corrosive substance, such as an acid, used in etching;
treat-ment; French, from Old French, present participle of
mordre, to bite, from Vulgar Latin *mordere,
from Latin mordēre, to
bite
~mordent- (no-min adjuster) Music: a
melodic ornament in which a principal tone is rapidly
alternated with the tone a half or full step below, German,
from Italian mordente, from mordere, to bite,
from Vulgar Latin *mordere, from Latin mordēre
The vowel connection should now become
more evident in the metope. The word more is straight
ahead, and is a part of the root mē-3-
seadog (22),
which seems to make the god of war the a of es. Flesh is
also sensed associated with the orb of it. The claymore
moves the green making the dead and dying didactic
butte. In the process, it is Aries
that serves as the landing pad. This associates the zodiac,
Gregorian calendar (o-clock) as a working mechanism
seemingly overlaying the map. Europa has also come around a
long way to make the jump, riding upon the bull, possibly
stepping on the scorpion, and kicking the Cancer out of the
way given out by the news. Color-Music-Melody |
~moribund-
(mystic almond) approaching death; about to die; on the
verge of becoming obsolete: moribund customs; a
moribund way of life; Latin moribundus, from
morī
The word bund is from the root
bhendh-woodbinder
(13),
and is associated with India, as a long street that runs
along or around a harbor. It is also associated with other
bundles, such as the Old High German bunt. The Hindu source
is Middle Persian, from Avestan banda-, from Old Iranian.
Moribund also neighbors the morgue, from French,
la Morgue, building in Paris used as a morgue, and
the phrase haughty manner is mentioned (see
al-2-bomb*).
This is from Old French morguer, to look at solemnly,
from Vulgar Latin *murricāre,
to make a face, from *murrum, muzzle.
~morsel-
(no-min dasher) a small piece of food; a tasty delicacy; a
tidbit; a small amount; a piece: morsel of love; one
that is pleasing or delightful; Middle English, from Old
French, diminutive of mors, bite, from Latin
morsum, from neuter past participle of mordēre,
to bite
~mort-
(an-vil; see
pel-5- heartbeat*) mort1:
the note sounded on a hunting horn to announce the death of
a deer, Middle English, death, from Old French, from Latin
mors, mort-; mort2:
no derivative marker; a great number or quantity,
perhaps from mortal
~mortal-
(heart-signal) that which relates to the living beings on
Earth including humans: mortals with moral limits;
of, related to, or accompanying death: mortal suicide;
causing death; fatal: mortal wound; of great
intensity or severity: mortal conception; a human
being: mortal food; Middle English, from Old English,
from Old French, from Latin mortālis,
from mors, mort-, death
~mortar-
(no-men stirrup) a vessel in which substances are crushed or
ground with a pestle; (see
melæ- fortis*, pestle*) a form of
machine in which materials are ground, blended, or crushed;
a portable muzzle loaded cannon used
to fire shells at low velocities, short ranges, and high
trajectories, also called trench mortar; a device for
shooting a life line; any of the various bonding materials
used in masonry, surfacing, and plastering, especially a
plastic mixture of cement or line, sand, and water that
hardens in place and is used to bind together bricks or
stones; to bombard with mortar shells;
Middle English morter, from Old English mortere,
and from Old French mortier, both from Latin mortārium
~mortgage-
(inflater demon) a method of
bank interference between people and their right to own a
homestead or property by excessive inflation of value as a
method of profits and enemy of social structure; debt; the
creation of the pledge (plague; see plak-2-
fish angler (12))
and formation of paralysis of the time line; Ponzi scheme;
Middle English morgage, from Old French : mort,
dead (from Vulgar Latin *mortus, from Latin
mortuus, past participle of morī,
to die + gage, pledge (of Germanic origin)
This only leads to the marasmus of
millions in inflated values used a props of power that are
removed from the people, and placed into the hands of
privies. it seems a sort of bug virus similar to RNA
replication for the horn of plenty. Strangely, with the
mortar board, the foundation is built on top of the head for
the pyramid of power, as with the graduation hat.
~mortify-
(wineskin detector; 3b-ss) odium implemented on others
forcing (reflection of faith) immediate feelings seemingly
of shame (reflection of denial) raising doubt of the process
of humiliation perpetration and the falsity of wounded pride
being used as self; the practice of self-absorption (not
ascetic; see
bhag-
ascidium (59))
in effect becoming divided and undergoing mortification
accepting debt to the demon life of self-worth, greed, and
remaining annoyed by truth, Middle English mortifien,
to deaden, subdue, from Old French mortifier, from Latin
mortifiāre,
to kill : mors, mort-,
death + ficāre, -fy (comparisons:
vivify: Late Latin vīvificāre;
sanctify: Late Latin sānctificāre;
rarefy: Medieval Latin rārificāre )
Why does the pathological so hate
death? Because they worship the beasts. The clever use of
the phrase self-denial belongs to the odious who
label those who have conscience as ascetic, when they are
only compassionate, and have at least partially awoken to
the jump they keep making each day, and realizing that all
life has the same value. Diseases and viruses are not alive
and are unaware of the fact they are killing you. This inner
severity is masked so that the diseased can continue to
mortify the entire planet, and most will accept this as they
have not been educated, instead, they have been programmed
by extremely sick beings who have the worst case of
self-denial imaginable, and believe mortification of all of
those who live frugally, and enjoy the simple things in life
must be exterminated. This is important, as the beasts must
have those who must feed, similar to a vampire, or their
power is useless.
~mortuary-
(no-men one) body receptacle often associated with a
building (funeral home) where the worship of the body is
emulated as a gift to the beasts; Middle English
mortuarie, gift to a parish priest from the estate of
the deceased, funeral services, from Anglo-Norman, from
Latin mortuārium,
receptacle for dead things, neuter of mortuāius, of
the dead, from mortuus, dead, past participle of
morī, to die
~murder-
(Thor overloader) the taking or
destroying of living beings and organisms anywhere, anytime,
for any reason; the creation of statutes whereby killing is
made legally acceptable; warfare;
the institution of blame (masking shame) in order to
intensify the worship of the beasts, Middle English, murther,
from Old English morthor
~murrain-
(myrrh perique) the spreading of infectious diseases through
intentional purposes, such as profits; any of the various
infectous diseases of pigs, cattle, birds, or other animals
used excessively in vivifying sections determined by
diseases of the mind, Middle English moreine, from
Old French morine, from Medieval Latin morina,
from Latin morī, to die
~nightmare-
(NIH tree-trunk; blue/white
Nile) the realization of unlimited knowledge and creation in
any form that is manifested, Middle English, a
female demon that manifests
during sleep : night, night (see
nekw-t-
shapeshifter*) + mare, goblin,
(see marko-
magic bark (22))
from Old English The word night is closely
associated with the word equinox, which is like an invisible
line that moves on the Earth up and down surrounding the
equator, whereby this linear point receives the equal amount
of dark and light in accordance with the each day. While the
word mare is no goblin at all, it is actually a female
horse, which serves as a war horse for the sick. The second
version of mare belongs to the moon and her power. See
mori-
gargoyle (22).
~postmortem-
(postulant initiator) that which occurs after you are
capable of perceiving life, as though birth is a form of
death; autospy; those who inspect the birth of death
that is fully effective; autopsy; an analysis or
evaluation of completed events pertaining the birth and
death; Latin post mortem : post, afterward;
(see POST- apo-
alphabet (64))
+ mortem, accusative
of mors, death
~premorse-
(tea-r) a method of accounting for the facts of one's life
and condition without involving emotions, which is
often avoided and referred to as abruptly truncated, as
though bitten or broken off: a premorse leaf, Latin
praemorsus, past participle praemordēre,
to bite off in front : prae-, pre- + mordēre,
to bite (volition initiates curiosity leading to ethics?)
The fear mongering method of: premonition: men-1-
fret (29),
may prevent the mind from realizing that one is not
responsible for being born into a particular situation, or
that one is not as gifted or smart as one wishes. The word
premunition is the second PP to premorse defined as "to
fortify in advance", and this would be related to premorse
in the mind. In order to kill this possibility, vaccines are
installed into the mortuary in hopes that individuals do not
awaken, and put the pieces of the puzzle together. One
effective method of instigating ineffective response is to
pre-load emotions when the jumps are made.
~remorse-
(rea-r mechanism; rem-or-se initiation) formation of anguish
often associated with morality (measurement) for events or
actions that occurred previously;
repent (repel; see
pel-5- heartbeat*);
feelings associated with regret, rue, knowing, accepting,
truth, illation, the Fury group, and wrongful actions;
Obsolete: Compassion; Middle English remors, from
Old French, from Medieval Latin remorsum, from
neuter past participle of Latin remordēre,
to torment : re-, re- (see
[re- reredos (back of the fire; mirror
door)) + mordēre, to bite (peace initiates
compassion leading to awareness?)
[re- reredos (back of the fire; mirror door)
rē- hexose* (simple un-synthetic sugar)
Once the premorse break is made and the
manner in which it occurs, remorse then becomes similar to
REM, possibly where thoughts are unable to surmise the
gestalts, or jest-altitude. This altitude is specifically
associated by the diction in direct relation to the penis,
and penitence, where re-pent comes into play, but has no
root, and when the nearest one is revealed, repel
appears, which seems that having compassion of the heart has
nothing to do with remorse, it seems intentionally
misdirected to find an easier out, thus continuing to hide
the stronger marker of premorse. |
Part two:
Lily
|
 |
8-exude-hidrosis-sudatorium-sudoriferous-sudorific-suint-sweat-transude
-et-sweid-
sweat; to sweat; O-grade form *swoid-, Old English-
swætan, sweat, to sweat,
Germanic- *swaitaz, sweat, with its denominative *swaitjan,
to sweat; Suffixed form *swoid-os-, SUDORIFIC;
SUDORIFEROUS, Latin- sūdor, sweat, O-grade form *swoid-,
SUDATORIUM, SUINT, EXUDE, TRANSUDE, Latin- sūdāre, to
sweat; Suffixed zero-grade form *swid-r-os-, Greek-
hidrōs, hidrosis, sweat [Pokorny 2. sueid-
1043] lily* |
| Proem:
sweid- lily* (brain-sweat; sea water-id)
ked- hyades***; This directly follows the
root
s(w)e- hurdy gurdy*, sea water*, which is
where the "self" begins, along with the secret swami or just
an idiot. It is also where suicide occurs and seduction.
Before it, the swaddling hedonism, and just before this, the
swastika. The sea water root is the prince (or princess), as
in the swain (see also swan; swen-), a place
to make oneself ready. In the lex, it has somehow attempted
to attach itself to the power of envy inlaid with the
weid-
spice melonge (25)
root. But it seems that the following root sweid-
is more about the activation of the tower positions, similar
to puberty which is in search of love, and its true position
which may be referred to as the sword lily which is
associated with the hyacinth.
~exude- (oo
moduli) to ooze forth; to discharge or emit ( a secretion,
message, liquid or gas, for example) gradually; to exhibit
in abundance: a face that exuded self-satisfaction; Latin
exsūdāre : ex-, ex-
(see
eghs- carnallite*) + sūdūre, to sweat
It seems the ghost is resting in the
egg, or ex- root. Figures. The egg is actually with
another root often used for law, by the name of
awi- apollo (39).
Exude is surrounded by exuberate "to make fruitful" from
ūber, fertile, from
euæ-dh-r- circumvolution*, circumlocution*, and
exult, to leap, from sel- ileum*.
~hidrosis-
(jekyll emission; from jejunum) the formation and excretion
of sweat; sweat, especially in excessive or abnormal
amounts, Greek hidrōsis,
sweating, from hidrōs, sweat
Neighboring this is hie,
exertion, and hiemal, from hiems,
winter, from the root
ghei- cotangent* Hideous is from Old French
hide, hisde, fear, while hide has two roots:
(s)keu-
iphigenia (55);
kei-1-
dissentient (49)
~sudatorium-
(desert no-men) a hot-air room used for sweat baths, also
called sudatory, Latin sūdātōrium,
from neuter of sūdātōrius, for sweating, from
sūdātus, past participle of sūdāre, to sweat
~sudoriferous-
(AD-J) producing or secreting sweat: sudoriferous glands;
from Late Latin sūdōrifer
: Latin sūdōr,
sweat + -ficus, -fic
~sudorific-
(AD-J) causing or increasing sweat: sudorific drugs;
also called sudatory, New Latin sūdōrificus
: Latin sūdōr,
sweat
~suint-
(sui-juris) a natural grease formed from dried perspiration
found in the fleece of sheep, used as a source of potash,
French, from Old French, from suer, to sweat, from
Latin sūdāre
It seems again, we are jumping the
bridge, but what exactly happens when this is done is
completely left to the birds, and as we approach the word
sweat, it is preceded by swear, a very odd species of black
bird that turns you both ways and plants dei-seeds. See
swer- lister*
~sweat-
(sync moduli) a daily formation of excretion (perspiration)
through the pores of the human body with relation to heat;
perspiration that is exuded as droplets on the surface of
the skin: Monday was the beginning sweat of the week;
curing; a fermentation process of tobacco; the
release of moisture that carries salt content: the planet
was equipped with an advanced sweat process; the
illusion that when a body sweats, it is also nervous (from
perspective, perspire, persuasion); to increase the rhythm
of the heartbeat in an environment conducive to
perspiration; Slang: a slang
reference and form of illegal interrogation violating Geneva
and International laws, and the Fifth Amendment with the
illusion of extraction; Metallurgy: to join
(metal parts) by interposing cold solder and then heating; a
form of steaming food, such as vegetables; the colorless
saline moisture excreted by the sweat glands (see dermis
containing nerve endings, sweat, and sebaceous glands, also
called corium); strenuous active labor or exertion of
energy of the body; hard work: "Keep what they
produced by the sweat of their brow." (Mario Puzo -
AHD); Middle English swetan, from Old English swætan
Also, of note, saliva is another
secretion that is directed toward the outside, and sits
close to saline, from the root sal- hub*,
which may be analogous to the pore, but to illusively
protect it, the salient or salimeter appears, from the root
sel- ileum*. It is Salome who requested John
the Baptist's head on a platter.
~transude-
(transubstantiationalism) the intransitive-transitive
passage through pores or interstices in the manner of
perspiration, New Latin trānsūdāre
: Latin trāns-, trans- (see
teræ-2- lure*) + Latin sūdāre,
to sweat
This transsexual journey of turning
bread and wine into the blood of an old teacher is complete
nonsense, and used as serious propaganda, of which
conscience has already had a field day with down through
history. |
Part three: Limen
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15-hexa-hexad-seicento1-semester1-senary-sestet-sestina-sex-sext-sextant
-sextile-sextodecimo1-six-sixteen-sixty-et-s(w)eks-
Form *seks, SIX; SIXTEEN, SIXTY, Old English-
s(i)ex, six, with derivatives sixtig, sixty,
and sixtyne, sixteen (-tyne, ten; see
dekm-), Germanic- *seks; SENARY, SEX-;
SEICENTO, SEMESTER, Latin- sex, six; Suffixed form
*seks-to-, SESTET, SESTINA, SEXT, SEXTANT, SEXTILE;
SEXTODECIMO, Latin- sextus, sixth; Form *sweks,
HEXA-, HEXAD, Greek- hex, six [Pokorny sueks
1044] limen* (seicento2 -
dekm-) (semester1
- mē-2-)
(sextodecimo2
- dekm-) |
| Proem:
s(w)eks limen* (threshold of response;
heartbeat)
ghrendh-
curtain call (29) ~hexa-
(witch hazel) prefix, six: hexagram;
containing six atoms, molecules, or groups: hexose;
Greek, from hex, six [ref:
heuristic letter a removed from hexose]
Hexa is preceded by the now famous Yahweh
tail, or hewing down of an oak. See hexad
kau-
congas* (22)
~hexad-
(no men) a group or series of six: the quarter horse of
the day was the hexad; Late Latin hexas, hexad-
the number six, from Greek, from hex, six
~seicento1-
(no men big fish) the 17th century with reference to Italian
literature and art, Italian, from (mil)seicento, (one
thousand) six hundred : sei-,
six (from Latin sex; see s(w)eks- +
cento, hundred (from Latin centum; see dekm-)
The sei is defined as "sea whale" not sex
or six, created from the Norwegian seihval : sei,
coalfish (from Old Norse seidh) + hval, whale
(from Old Norse hvalr). The sei is also
surrounded by
sekw-1-
ideality*, ideomo*, or "following spot", and the
curious seidel bucket and seighior, from the
root
sen- implicit function*.
~semester1-
(sis)
one of two divisions of 15 to 18 weeks each
of an academic year; German from Latin (cursus)
sēmēstris, (course) of six months, from *sex-mēnstris
: sē-, six (from sex,
see s(w)eks-) +
mēnsis, month; see
mē-2-
Isis (21)
[ref:
sē- farsighted*]
The implementation of the 666,
or mensis, is interlaced directly into the clock
itself, with the first numeral three (3) designating the
placement of the sis between the mirror, consuming
knowledge and emotions for war. This is followed by the 6
and 9, or Cancer which is the Cardinal, or red bird
overlaying the four positions. Both 15 and 18 also rest upon
these Gregorian positions. With this sense installed, murder
becomes acceptable. The binding energy may be assumed in
many forms. See deik-
binding energy (66)
~senary-
(pre-sem) of, or related to the
number six; having six things or parts; Latin sēnārius,
from sēnī, six each, from sex, six
~sestet-
(red-city) a group of six lines
of poetry, especially the last six lines of a Petrarchan
sonnet; a poem or stanza containing six lines, Italian
sestetto, from sesto, sixth, from Latin sextus
sēmi-
impedance (46)
~sestina-
(red-rose) a verse form first
used by the Provencal troubadours, consisting of six
six-line stanzas and a three-line envoy. The end words of
the first stanza are repeated in varied order as end words
in other stanzas and also recur in the envoy; Italian, from
sesto, sixth, from Latin sextus
~sex-
sex1:
prefix, sex-: sextans; Latin, from sex, six;
sex2: no
derivative marker; classification for organisms as
female or male on the basis of their reproductive organs and
functions; gender gap; the urge for two to be one,
which is not possible; Middle English, from Latin sexus
The stage is set for the gapping hole with the first
sewer, made from the Aquarius resting in the house of fear.
The medieval servant is next, distinguishing the sit from
set. The aquarium is marked by Ovid, and the makings of the
ewer.
akw-ā-
red admiral (52);
sed- hutzpah*
~sext-
(1 IS 2) Ecclesiastical: the fourth of the seven canonical
hours; the time of day set aside for this service, usually
the sixth hour, or noon; Middle English sexte, from
Late Latin sexta, from Latin sexta (hōra),
sixth (hour), feminine of sextus, sixth
~sextant-
(navigation) an instrument containing a graduated 60-degree
arc, used for measuring the altitudes of celestial bodies,
New Latin sextāns,
sextant-, from Latin, sixth part (so called because the
instrument's arc is a sixth of a circle), from sextus,
sixth
~sextile-
(point of view) of, or related to the position of two
celestial bodies when they are 60°
apart, Latin sextīlis, one sixth, from sextus,
sixth
~sextodecimo1-
(g-coder) Printing: the page size of a book composed of
printer's sheets folded into 16 leaves or 32 pages; a book
composed of sectodecimo pages, also called sixteenmo,
Latin sextōdecimō,
ablative of sextusdecimus, one sixteenth : sextus,
sixth, see s(w)eks + decimus, tenth (from decem,
ten, see dekm-)
~six-
(top quark) the cardinal number equal to 5 + 1; the sixth in
a set or sequence; something having six parts, units, or
members; in the state of confusion or disorder; Middle
English, from Old English
~sixteen-
(deca) the cardinal sum equal to 15 + 1; the sixteenth in a
set or sequence; Middle English, sixtene, from Old English
sixtyne
~sixty-
(deca modulation) the cardinal number equal to 6 multiplied
by 10 (6 X 10); the decade (grouping of 10) marked by six:
at sixty, humans were normally half-way through life,
Middle English, from Old English sixtig |
Part four: Limpet
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4-groundsel-swallow-swill-manticore2-et-swel-
to eat, drink; Old English- swilian, swill, to wash
out, gargle, Germanic- *swil-, perhaps from swel-;
Extended form *swelk-, SWALLOW1,
GROUNDSEL1, Old
English- swelgan, to swallow, Germanic- *swelgan,
*swelham; Greek- mantikhōras,
manticore, probably from Iranian *khvāra, eating
[Pokorny 1. suel(k)- 1045] limpet* (manticore1
- mer-) |
| Proem:
swel- limpet* (am signal: detonates on
contact) That which is swallowed has begun to change. The
anapest strike and the dactyl finger may not fly as well as
they used to. The head of the man may only be the man-lion,
and the lion only that which feeds the scorpion. The
groundsel is wavering as the skill of words and their swill
to wash out the spirit and soul connection is discerned.
Amplitude and frequency matter, and are clear signals of the
beasts at work with their choppers. The clinging of the
limpets attached to your brain may be closely associated
with your heart beat.
~groundsel-
groundsel1:
(snakeroot locater) any of the various plants of the genus
Senecio, having rayed, usually yellow flower
heads, Middle English groundeswille, from Old English
grundeswylige, alteration (influenced by grund, ground)
of gundeswilge : gund, pus + swelgan,
to swallow (from its use in reducing abscesses);
groundsel2:
variant of groundsill: horizontal timber nearest ground
level in a foundation and frame of a building or house [ref:
seneca snakeroot: Eastern North American plant ( Polygala
senega ) having a terminal cluster of small white
flowers and roots that are used medicinally.]
~swallow-
swallow1:
(moor identifier) a method of cause identified with the
passage of plant matter, or dead matter through the mouth
and throat, on its way to the stomach: the assumption that
something is edible: the main stream of news looked like
pus, which no one is swallowing; the assumption of a
concept of acceptance often used as propaganda: it was
assumed that banks swallowed all the money; Nautical:
the channel through which a rope runs in a block or a
mooring chock, Middle English swalowen, from Old
English swelgan; swallow2:
no derivative marker, any of the various small,
graceful, swift-flying passerine birds of the family
Hirundinidae, having long, pointed wings, a usually
notched or forked tail, and a large mouth for catching
flying insects and noted for their regular migrations in
large numbers, often over long distances, such as the swift,
Middle English swalowe, from Old English swealwe
[ref: swift: Chimney
swift ( Chaetura pelagica )
The tail of the swallow is deeply engrained in the male
bird with very long legs. It is also associated with the
butterfly (Papilionidae)
which have extensions on their wings. The truer root of the
swallow is the root ghel-1-
counterpoint*, and associated with the celandine, or
swallowwort, which seems to come back to the concept of 1 is
2, but it also seems to rest on top of the water, as in the
horizon, or frequency and amplitude of wave reception. The
lexicon of the wel- is also very near, which
reminds me of the creator of Euthenics, Ellen Swallow
Richards, who seemingly was singing the swan song all along.
~swill-
(moor2
modulation) to drink greedily or grossly: "Unshaven
horsemen swill the great wines of the Chateaux." (W.H.
Auden - AHD); to flood with water, as for washing; to feed
(animals) with swill; to drink or eat greedily or to excess;
(no min) a mixture of liquid and solid food, such as table
scraps, fed to animals, especially pigs; slop; kitchen
waste; garbage; a deep draft of liquor; nonsense; rubbish,
Middle English swilen, to wash out, from Old English
swilian
The word swill rests on swim, something
that is often associated with the surface of the water. But
it is quickly followed by swindle
and swine, which is from
the root sū-
lichen*, neighbors with the swastika, from su-
libyan desert (43).
The sound of swell begins immediately after sweet, a major
mechanism for the Nazi, at least in the senses arriving.
~manticore2-
(message in a bottle) a legendary monster having the head of
a man, the body of a lion, and the tail of a scorpion,
Middle English manticores, from Latin mantichōra,
from Greek mantikhōras, variant of martiokhōras,
from Old Iranian *martiya-khvāra-, man-eater : *martiya,
man; akin to Old Persian martiya-, man, see mer-
+ khvāra-, eater; akin to Avestan khvar-, to
eat, see
swel- limpet* (am signal: detonates on
contact) |
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
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