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Groups [8 of 66] Monostich, Beast, Cinquefoil, Cilium, Caricature, Carnivores, Morgue, Machismo

implosionbeastapocalypse
© 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've been expecting you", the beast says.

In search of - The Sapient Stone Language

Chapter Twenty Seven: Princess Vesta's Dressing Room and the Interfaces   Current hub, index




 

Keywords: goddess of the hearth, document house, divesting the beast, werewolf, cinquefoil, assassin bug, ves heill, vera and vesa, eschatology, synecdoche, veal is yolk, yolk is veal
 
"I've got a real moron thing I do, it's called THINKING."  (George Carlin - 1991)

To follow the trail takes us through a group of eight roots that all seem to be closely associated. Welcome back to another chapter, and I had previously mentioned the relationship between Vesa and Vera, and in this chapter, we can begin to understand the psyche mapping a little more in relation to their meanings. In the first group, the Pokorny is telling us that our left side has been stitched to the right side, similar in fashion to the way our brains are organized, where the left side helps us express and create words, while the right helps us measure, and see the unseen.

Part one: Monostich
updated 2008JULY20

third eye
©ebookopen.com

6-astute-divan-vesta-was-wassail1-were-et-wes-1- to stay, dwell, pass the night, with derivative meaning "to be", O-grade form *wos-, Old English- wæs, was, Germanic *was-, Lengthened-grade form *wēs-, were, Old English- wæ re, (subjunctive), wæ ron (plural), were, Germanic- *wēz-, WASSAIL, Old Norse vesa, vera, to be, Germanic *wesan, Perhaps suffixed form *wes-tā-, Latin- Vesta, Vesta, household goddess, Possibly suffixed variant form *was-tu-, Latin- astus, astute, skill, craft, (practiced in a town) Greek- astu, town (< "place where one dwells"). Suffixed form *wes-eno-, Old Persian vahannam, divan, house, monostich** (wassail2 - kailo-)

~astute- having or showing shrewdness and discernment, especially with respects to civility and rights as an individual; shrewd, Latin astūtus, from astus, craft [ref: civil- see root kei-1-; cradle, dissentient**; shrewd-, derived from shrew, rascal; shrew derived from shrewe, villain]
~divan- a long backless sofa, especially one with pillows set against the wall; counting room, tribunal, public audience (living) room, council chamber, coffeehouse, smoking room; book of poems, especially one written in Arabic or Persian by a single author, French, from Turkish, from Persian dīvān, place of assembly, roster, probably from Old Iranian *dipivahanam, document house : Old Persian dipī-, writing, document (from Akkadian tuppa, tablet, letter, from Sumerian dub, to write) + Old Persian vahanam, house
~Vesta- Roman Mythology: the goddess of the hearth, worshipped in a temple containing the sacred fire tended by the vested virgins, chaste, pure; Astronomy: brightest of all asteroids and the fourth to be discovered, [ref: from Hestia: "
In myth Hestia was the first born child of Kronos and Rhea who was swallowed by her father at birth."]
Comment: Hestia is a name given to Vesta, however it does not have a root connection. The word Hestia is close neighbors with words such as Hesperus, a name given to Venus for only the appearance of the planet during the evening; and hetaera is a polka partner, which is a courtesan or concubine in ancient Grecian times or a cultivated class of female slaves.
~was- first and third person singular past indicative of be, Middle English, from Old English wæs; ? [Note: wast- second person singular past tense of be.]
~wassail- salutation, drinking to your health, expression of festivity, much drinking, Middle English, contraction of wæshæil, be healthy, from Old Norse ves heill : ves, imperative singular of vera, to be + heill, healthy, see root kailo-, [ref: kailo-, consecration of difference and in turn sacrilegiously worshipping the body of christ*]
Comment: This is why everyone is taught to believe Christ died on a cross, when that cross is actually your cross you bear when avoiding your inner house. Don't confuse the normal act of staying healthy physically and psychologically with excessive ritualistic focus on the body, and the glorification of the blood and bread side.
~were- second person singular and plural and first and third person plural past indicative of be. Past subjunctive of be. See Usage notes at if, wish, Middle English were, weren, from Old English wære, wæren, wæron, [ref: werāz, men together, see root wī-ro-, werewolf]

I had previously also mentioned Rhea, and this word does not have a root derivative either, but is connected to the Demeter rooted group it seems, māter-  Rhea (20). This could be correlated to the left side, or Vera, wer-2-  vera (15), which needs more work, and I had mentioned Vesa and vessel, but exactly how to interpret stigma location and elaborate constructively is still in the works. To subject, Vesta seems very important in relation to your hetero demeanor, and the creation of our soul, the combining of the father and feminine one, and it seems Rhea was conglomerated into the system.

The monostich is defined as being a single line of poetry. I take this to imply that it is in relation to the six words displayed connected to the root, and their essence for poetry, and also in looking at the sound, it represents one single unit, and also (alone), but it is divided before becoming one.

Part two: The Beast

Behim: bēhēmâ, beast; huge animal, behemoth
Job 40:14-16 -
Then will I also confess unto thee that thine own right hand can save thee. [15] Behold now behemoth, which I made with thee; he eateth grass as an ox. [16] Lo now, his strength is in his loins, and his force is in the navel of his belly. [Job 40 ]

beast

6-himation-devest-invest-travesty-vest-wear-et-wes-2- to clothe, Extension of eu-1-, Suffixed o-grade form *wos-eyo-, Old English werian, to wear, carry, Germanic *wazjan, Suffixed form *wes-ti-, Latin- vestis, garment, Suffixed form *wes-nu-, Greek- hennunai, himation, to clothe, with nominal derivative heima, hima, (< *wes-mn), garment, behemoth*, beast*
~himation- a rectangular (square-blanket) woolen or linen cloak worm by men and women in ancient Greece, (Greek, diminutive of hima, himat, garment, variant of heima, from hennunai, to clothe)
~devest- Law: to take away a (right or possession, for example), Archaic: remove the clothing, or covering of, deprive of title, or property, Obsolete French desvestir, to undress, from Medieval Latin divestīre : Latin dis-, dis- + Latin vestis, garment, [ref: divest is polka partners with ~dives- man of great wealth, Middle English, from Latin dīves, under-god*]
Comment: There are more peculiarities with this word's lex, as with the word devest which also has polka partner ~devi- Hinduism: a mother goddess having various manifestations and roles, especially that of consort to Shiva, Sanskrit devī, feminine of devah, god [ref: see polka partners deviant and deviate with root wegh-] [references for ~devi-~dives- see root deiw- deadems (25)]
~invest- to freely commit capital in order to gain a financial return, devote for the future advantage, psychological or moral devotion, "Men of our generation are invested in what they do, women in what we are." (Shana Alexander - AHD), endow with authority, install in ceremonious prestige, endowing the pervasive (eidolon) quality [ref: ~eidolon- a phantom, an apparition, an image of an ideal, Greek- eidōlon, from eidos, form]; to clothe, adorn, cover completely, envelop, surround with troops, besiege, from Italian investire, and from French investir, both from Latin investīre, to clothe, surround : in-, in, see IN-2 + vestīre, to clothe, (from vestis, clothes) [ref: IN-2- into, within, see root en-]
~travesty- exaggerated or grotesque imitation, debasement, likeness, caricature, ridicule, from obsolete disguised, burlesqued, from French travesti, past participle of travestir, to disguise, parody, from Italian tranvestire : Latin in trāns-, trans- + Latin vestīre, to dress, (from vestis, garment)
~revet- to retain (an embankment, for example), with a layer of stone, concrete, or other supporting material, provide with a revetment, masonry, barricade against explosives, French revêtir, from Old French revestir, to clothe again, from Latin revestīre : re-, re- + vestīre, to clothe
Comment: Revet also has an interesting polka partner which is revest, which is a form of gaining power again. Right next to revetment is review, which is with the root
weid- spice melonge (25)
~vest- sleeveless garment, (any garment that has holes, normally with buttons sometimes in several pieces or as a blouse*), waist length, sleeveless garment worn for protection; undershirt, t-shirt, Archaic: clothing; raiment, Obsolete?: ecclesiastical vestment, to place (authority, property, or rights, for example) in the control of a person or group, especially to give someone an immediate right to present or future possession or enjoyment of (an estate, for example), endow another with power, to clothe or robe, as in ecclesiastical vestment, to become lengthy vested, praise, French veste, robe, from Italian vesta, from Latin vestis, garment, [ref: raiment, clothing, garment, Middle English, short for araiment, from Old French areement, array, from areer, arrayer, to array, see root reidh-]
◊~wear- to carry or have with as a covering, adornment, to carry or have habitually, display in appearance, bear in a particular manner; fly or display colors; damage, diminish, erode, or consume by long or hard use, attrition, or exposure; fatigue, weary, or exhaust, Nautical: make a sail boat come about aft, come about to stern to windward, to last under continual use, pass gradually or tediously, state of being worn, a particular kind of clothing, rainwear, gradual impairment, breakdown by relentless pressure, use up or consume gradually, punish by spanking; become less convincing, acceptable, popular, through repeated use; exercise authority in a household, Middle English weren, from Old English werian
Comment: The definitions for wear are useless, and we have a serious antimony, Warning: all words between wean (root wen-1-) and weasel are suspected implants. The next root adjacent is weather, root wē-; List: weapon, weaponeer, weaponry, weapon systems, wear, wearability, wearable, wear and tear, weariful, weariless, wearing, wearisome, weary, ending at wesand]

If you thought investing was only something that was associated with money, you may want to rethink that one. We have the vested virgins and the invested. We also have an array, and it seems it can be worn by rowing. The Pokorny on this one lead me to a mountain, which at first did not make much sense, and it would not have helped the reader. So I dug deeper to come up with the interpretation and the last chapter was there as the perfect guide. The himation is one of the first of its kind to signify what clothing was according to the Indo-European and Greek source information, and the word be is attached to the letters him, leaving a masculine tone, which is representative of the physical man carrying the torch for envy.

It seems that when we put clothing on, we address the beast that is in all of us, but does not necessarily infer that everyone is capable of evil. Only those who divvy their houses into a new plan. To wear has so many different meanings, it becomes useless, and may in fact be misleading. Here is an example of how this works. Take the word dwell, and almost everyone has a sense of what it means. If you look at the root meaning, first, we are told it is to live as a resident or to fasten one's attention. However, the older root tells us that it is meant to mislead from the Old English word dwellen, and we also have the word dwelling which is supposed to represent a place to live. As you can see, what is perceived as a dwelling is not clear, in fact, it seems a way to fixate certain psychological perceptions attuned to a preferred system of control.

When we wear clothing, no matter who you really are, this aspect is destroyed, and a new one is formed that most people perceive as you, when it is not you at all, but only a representation of your ability to have money. This relation helps to destroy any peace between people and adding to the ability of people to measure out other people with their naive measuring sticks and setting precedents for money alone over human life and the sacred passage. Often, this is forced upon others, and the actual people who attempt to build a loving relation, experience a lifetime of misery instead. By preparing words that people accept, such as the long lists of red above, this also makes it more difficult, as most of the words represent what the beasts in our soul would prefer we remember.

Part three: Cinquefoil

cinquefoil

3-endue-exuviae-reduviid-et-eu-1- to dress, endue, Latin induere, to don, (ind-, variant of in-, on; see en-), Latin exuere, exuviae, to doff, (ex-, off, see eghs), Latin- reduvia, reduviid, fragment, (red-, back, in reverse; see re-), also see extension root wes-2-; cinquefoil**
~endue- to provide with a quality or trait, endow, to put on (a piece of clothing), Middle English enduen, from Old French enduire, to lead in, induct (influenced by Middle English endowen, to endow; see ENDOW), from Latin indūcere; see INDUCE, Middle English induen, to clothe, from Latin induere, to put on [ref: induce- lead by persuasion, see root deuk-; endow- imagined trait, see root dō-]
~exuviae-
cast-off skins of various coverings of organisms, such as the shells of crabs, external larvae or nymphs of insects; snake-skin, Latin, from exuere, to take off
~reduviid- see assassin bug, New Latin Reduviidae, family name, from Reduvius, type genus, from Latin reduvia, hangnail, fragment, [ref: assassin bug- predatory insect with beak like claws, see link]

Are you taking your clothes off, or are you putting them on, seems to be the theme of this group, of which makes no sense. This group is also very unusual, an example being when was the last time you knew of someone referring to a hangnail as reduviid? The Pokorny is accurate, and is telling us that we have five parts according to the two sides, each have two genders, and a additional part. We can take a look at them, or we can cover them up, it's up to each individual to see what they want to see.

We seem to have the capability to endue a state of grace or appearance about our presence, and this can be done using 400,000 words with some clothing, and a few bucks. The problem exists because with this power, you can affect others, and infect others, even remove their life. A good question to ask yourself would be why? Are we completely instinctive to be the animal? I would say no, as most humans do not eat or kill other humans. So again, we must ask where does all the distortions and hate come from?

It must be consumed, and absorbed in the pathos, and this helps us to clarify that evil does reside inside people, and they come in all colors, those who are filled with greed, and those who have had their hearts removed and burned, and millions of combinations all needing the sustenance of earth to survive. Our perceived world is only a reflection of who we are inside.

Part four: Cilium

14-evacuate-devastate-vacant-vacate-vacation-vacuum-vain-vanish-vanity
-vaunt-void-wane-want-waste-et-eu-2- lacking, empty, Extended forms *euæ-, *wā-, *wæ-, Suffixed form *wæ-no-, WANE, Old English- wanian, to lessen, and wana, lack, Germanic- *wanēn, want, Old Norse vanta, to lack, North Germanic *wanatōn, Suffixed form *wā-no-, Latin- vānus, empty, Extended form *wak-, (VACUITY), (AVOID), (DEVOID),  Latin- vacāre, (variant vacāre (variant vocāre), to be empty, Extended and suffixed form *wās-to-, Latin- vāstus, empty, waste, cilium**
~evacuate- to make empty, remove or vacuum, excrete or discharge (waste matter) especially from the bowels, relinquish military aggression, possession, or occupation, withdraw or send away troops, vacate, remove to safety, withdraw, Middle English evacuaten, from Latin ēvacuāre, ēvacuāt-, to empty out, : ē, ex-, + vacuus, empty, [ref: ex- prefix, outside of, see root eghs]
~evanesce- to dissipate or disappear like vapor, disappear, Latin ēvānēcere, to vanish, : ē, ex-, ex- + vānēscere, to disappear (from vānus, empty)
~devastate- to lay waste, destroy, overwhelm, confound, Latin- dēvāstāre, dēvāstāt- : dē-, de- + vāstāre, to lay waste (from vāstus, empty, desolate)
~vacant- containing nothing, empty, without an incumbent or occupant, unfilled, emptiness of mind, not claimed by heir, lacking intelligence or knowledge, lacking expression, blank, not filled with any activity, empty, Middle English, from Old French, from Latin vacāns, vacant-, present participle of vacāre, to be empty
~vacate- ceasing occupation, give up, empty of occupant or incumbent, Law: make void or annul; countermand, leave a location, Latin vacāre, vacāt-, to be empty
~vacation- time devoted to pleasure, rest, or relaxation, especially one with payment granted from employer; holiday, fixed period of holidays, especially one during which a school, court, or business suspends activities, Archaic: act or instance of vacating, Middle English vacacioun, from Old French vacation, from Latin vacātiō, vacātiōn-, freedom from occupation, from vacātus, past participle of vacāre, to be empty, at leisure
Comment: Realistically, we live in a society where people must take vacations from themselves. See vacuum cleaner, absence of māter;  Demeter, māter-  Rhea (20)
~vacuum- absence of matter, space empty of matter, relatively empty, significantly lower pressure than atmospheric pressure in a separate space, state of emptiness, void, sealed from external or environmental influences, isolation, vacuum cleaner, Latin empty space, from neuter of vaccus, empty, from vacāre, to be empty
~vain- not yielding to desire, fruitless, excessively proud of one's appearance, or ideals, conceited, Archaic: foolish irreverent, disrespectful manner, Middle English, from Old French, from Latin vānus, empty
~vanish- to pass out of sight, quickly disappear, pass out of existence; lack of usefulness, worth, Mathematics: becoming zero, Middle English vanisshen, alteration of Old French esvanir, esvaniss-, from Vulgar Latin *esvanīre, alteration of ēvānēscere : ē, ex-, ex- + vanēscere, to vanish (from vānus, empty)
~vanity- the quality or condition of being vain, excessive pride in one's appearance, conceit, worthlessness, futile, a dressing table to enhance self appearance; bathroom cabinet that encloses a basin and its water lines and drain, usually with a ceramic coated, metal, or marble top with shelving below for toiletries, Middle English vanite, from Old French, from Latin vānitās, from vānus, empty
~vaunt- to speak boastfully of, brag, boast, speech of extravagant self-praise, Middle English vaunten, from Old English vanter, from Latin Latin vānitāre,  to talk frivolously, frequentative of Latin vānāre, from empty, empty
~void- containing no matter, empty, completely lacking, devoid, ineffective, useless, not valid, a vacuum, open space, gap, state of loneliness, take out contents, excrete body waste, Middle English, from Old French viode, feminine of voit, from Vulgar Latin *vocitus, alteration of Latin vacīvus, vocīvus, variant of vaccus, from vacāre, to be empty
~wane- to decrease gradually in size, amount, intensity, or degree; decline; the decreasing of illumination during the period of (full moon through new moon); the exposed edge of a board, "The tide was near the turn and already the day was on the wane." (James Joyce - AHD), Middle English wanen, from Old English wanian
Comment: Living each day is the same process as (slowly decreasing) in power (gradually each day), and this is replenished with food, and sleep, which offsets the mirror of life. Water and air also assist but their relationship is more in evanesce to our perceived function.
~want- desire greatly, wish for, seeming to be without or lack, request the presence of another, seek to capture; desire; inclination toward, containing need, destitute, to be disposed, something desired, defect of character, to have control of one's path, Middle English wanten, to be lacking, from Old Norse vanta
~waste- to use, consume, spend, expend thoughtlessly or carelessly; cause to lose energy, strength, vigor, exhaust, tire, or enfeeble; destroy completely, time passed without use, uncultivated opportunity, desert, ruin, worthless byproduct, garbage, trash, excrement, regarded as worthless, used as a conveyance or container, accomplish nothing, Middle English wasten, from Old North French waster, from Latin vāstāre, to make empty, the condition of wilderness in the mind*, Synonyms: blow, consume, dissipate, fritter, squander

All the waste on the earth is produced by humans, as animal life if left to roam, does not deteriorate our environment as we do. A good question to ask is, where does all the human excrement go if not completely diluted? This product could have been put to better use. The rest of our waste is nonsense, and a disease. Our constant desire for more, to buy more, spend more, is rotting us from the inside out. Our inside becomes vacated, and what are we told to do? Get more vacated by taking one, as vacations often do, although subtly, generate a desirous attempt to fill a void of overwork, or just inducted expected pleasure.

The relationship to wane in this group is very interesting and will be returned to for more evaluation, as this may be an important key in understanding our psyche.

Part five: Caricature

ego

2-ego-I-et-eg Nominative form of the person pronoun of the first person singular, for oblique forms, see me-1, Old English ic, I, Germanic- *ek-, Extended form *ēgō, ego, (EGOIST), (EGOTISM), Latin- ego, caricature*
~ego- what is perceived as the self that is separate from the perceived surrounding world or others; Psychoanalysis: the tracking of the division of the psyche that is labeled conscious; exaggerated sense of self-importance; conceit, excess pride or self-esteem, New Latin, from Latin I
Comment: The diction originally implied that it was appropriate to have self-esteem, but they also use the word ego to tag to that concept, which is why we have words like egocentric, which is the focus of these perceptions on words like ego, which is misleading you, and adds to the myriad of sound-bite conventional terminology which through the info stream, contributes to the negation of critical standards for understanding these pathological and complicated concepts.
~I- Pronoun, used to refer to oneself in oral expression, the self, the ego, Middle English, from Old English ic, an Indivisable that is capable of being divvied*
Comment: This section is being expanded.
Notes: Individual- single human being; in-, not + dīviduus, divisible; no derivative marker, closest rooted word: indite- write, compose, dictate, to say habitually, see root deik-; no roots for Indo or Indo-European, next rooted word is indomitable- root demæ-
-- Word classifications such as noun, etc, are being held back until the entire data has been collected, and then, slowly they will be applied, but it is important to say that certain types of categories are subject to manipulation in very complicated ways, so a list of their status will be sought for compilation separately, and then compared for a more accurate assessment. However, a list with definitions of particular types of labels, such as superlative, ablative, and others that are used in the explanations of derived words will be compiled as soon as possible and added to the pronunciation page with a slightly different title.

Envy loves to go, if you let her. She and her fearless partner will twist a new beam for your reality, and you will live in the matrix as if all the matter we restructure and waste is what matters the most, when we know damn well that there is more to life that should be sought, and that being truth.

The truth is not wanted by most unfortunately, but there are many who would easily begin to waken, and favor dignity in living a human life versus the fascist state of affairs. The caricature lead on this group describes the human character as an extension of the self and often a grotesque imitation. The system only need provide you will the perceived needs, and the cattle settle into the herd.

Part six: Carnivores

apocalypse
© unknown

14-ecto-electury1-eschatology-ex-exo-exoteric-exotic-exterior-external-extra
-extreme-samizdat1-strange-synecdoche1-et-eghs
out, variant *eks, EX1, EX-, Latin- ex, ex-, out of, away from, synecdoche, Greek- ex, ek, out of, from, Suffixed (comparative) form, *eks-tero-, Latin- exter, strange, outward (feminine ablative exterā, extrā, on the outside), Suffixed (superlative) form, Latin- extrēmus, extreme, outermost, (*-mo-, superlative suffix), Suffixed form *eghs-ko-, Greek- eskhatos, eschatology, outermost, last, EISTEDDFOD, Welsh- eistedd, sitting, from Celtic *eks-dī-sedo-, SAMIZDAT, Russian- iz, from, out of, Balto-Slavic- *iz, carnival*, carnivores*   (electury2 - leigh-)  (samizdat2 - sem-1-) (samizdat3 - dō-) (synecdoche2 - dek-)
~ecto- outer, external: ectoparasite, Greek ekto-, from ektos, outside, from ek, ek-, out
~
electury1- a type of perceived (drug) that is administered orally with sugar, water, or honey, into a suitable pastry mass, Middle English electuarie, from Latin Latin ēlēctuārium, probably alteration of Greek ekleikton, from ekleikhein, to lick up : ek-, out + leikhein, to lick, see root leigh-
Comment: The polka partner to this word is eleemosynary which means: to be dependent on charity, and it also means synonymously to the word benevolent. That implies passivity, and obedience versus compassion, and individuality. Exactly what is being implied by this word is strange no doubt, and could be inferred to mean this is not food, but knowledge that is referenced.
~eschatology- a branch of thinkers (tanks) who are concerned with the end of the world*, apocalyptic influence, belief in ultimatums, focused on death and destruction, last judges, Greek eskhatos, last
~ex- EX1- not including, without, free of charges; from, but not having graduated, EX- prefix, outside, out of, away from: exodontia; not; without: excaudate; former, Middle English, from Old French. from Latin.
~exo- prefix, outside, external: exoskeleton, from Greek exō, outside, from ex, out of
~exoteric- that which is publicly flowing out of the inner circle of intensified knowledge, and readily available on the Internet in varied forms both valid, and fantasy; comprehensible information flow, Latin exōtericus, external, from Greek exōterikos, from exōterō, comparative of exō, outside, from ex, out
~exotic- from another part of the world, foreign, intriguingly unusual or different, excitingly strange, fantastic, (pornography, see root per-5-), Latin exōticus, from Greek exōtikus, from exō, outside
~exterior- outer, external, originating or action from the outside, suitable for use outdoors, part of a surface that is outside, external or outward appearance, virtual or visual perspective of outdoors, Latin comparative of exter, outward
~external- related to, existing on, or connected with the outside or an outer part; exterior; existing independently of the mind; acting or coming from the outside; outward superficial appearance; "An internal sense of righteousness dwindles into an external concern for reputation." (A. R. Gurney Jr. - AHD); related to foreign affairs, outer circumstances, outer space, Middle English, from Latin externus, outward, from exter
~extra- prefix, outside, beyond: extraterritorial; Late Latin, from Latin extrā
~extreme- most remote in any direction, outermost or farthest, highest degree or intensity, excessive, greatest severity, drastic, Archaic: final, last; either of two things situated at opposite ends of a range, immoderate, maximum of minimum valuation, Mathematics: first or last term in a ratio or series; Logic: the major or minor term of a syllogism, Middle English, from Old French, from Latin extrēmus
~samizdat1- the secret publication and distribution of government banned literature in the Soviet Union; the literature produced by this system; underground press; Russian : sam, self, see root sem-1-; + izdatel'stvo, publishing house, (from izdat', to publish, on the model of Gosizdat, State Publishing House : iz, from, out of + dat', to give, [see root dō-; endow, traitor, boughten*]
Comment: The root group sem-1-will need to be completed in order to understand more about this anomaly assimilation and why this word and the samizdat2 root seems more related to synecdoche1 than this word is implying in meaning. The word itself almost seems to emulate a meaning of self-from-data, but how illegal this publishing actually was is open for interpretation.
~strange- not previously known, unfamiliar, out of the ordinary, unusual, seeming different, not like what is familiar, exotic, foreign; reserved in manner, distant, not comfortable or at ease, constrained, not accustomed or conditioned, Archaic: of, relating to, or characteristic of another place far away; Middle English, from Old French estrange, extraordinary, foreign, from Latin extrāneus, adventitious, foreign, from extrā, outside, from feminine ablative of exter, outward; Synonyms: peculiar, odd, queer, quaint, outlandish, singular, eccentric, curious
Comment: In the environment we live in today, strange is normal, and the use of this word is out of control basically, and there is a possible connection to the root group streig-; stringent, prestige, legalism**. Considering people strange because they are different or unusual is a way for those who control you to remain in power over you, and they currently are very hungry. Getting used to certain demeanors and peculiarities of people does not make everyone else who is unique into strange.
~synecdoche1- a figure of speech in which a part is used for the whole (as hand for sailor), the whole for a part (as the law for police officer), the specific for the general ( as thief for pickpocket), or the material for the thing from which it is made (as steel for sword), Middle English, alteration (influenced by Latin synecdochē), of Middle English synodoches, from Medieval Latin synodoche, alteration of Latin synecdochē, from Greek sunekdokhē, from sunekdekhesthai, to take on a share of : sun-, syn- + ekdekhesthai, to understand, (ek-, out of) + to take, [see root dek-; dogma, paradox, bioconversions**]
--

I'm currently baffled at why the word eisteddfod is included with the explanations for this group of words when it is not derived with this group, and it has two roots already attached to it, sed- and bheuæ-, as this is defined as an annual competition between Welsh poets, writers, and musicians.

The synecdoche is more than likely being used today to help mislead you psychologically, especially when the rhetoric is spewed from the mouth of beasts and those who have ratcheted up their self service as a form of promotion.

The above group is also cross referencing a lot of different concepts I would like to dig on, especially the word samizdat which has three root connections. Any comments or updates will be added here.

Part seven: Morgue

implosion

7-etesian-inveterate-veal-veteran-veterinary-vitellus-wether-et-wet-2- Year, Suffixed form *wet-ru-, Germanic *wethruz, wether, perhaps "yearling", Suffixed form *wet-es, Latin vetus, old (< "having many years"), veterinary, Latin veterīnus, of beasts of burden, of cattle (perhaps chiefly old cattle?) Greek- etos, etesian, year, Suffixed form *wet-olo-, Latin vitulus, calf, yearling, implosion*, morgue*
~etesian- occurring annually, used of the prevailing northerly summer winds of the Mediterranean, from Latin etēsius, from Greek etēsios, from etos, year
~inveterate- firmly established, deep-rooted, persistence engrained, habit, habitual, chronic, Middle English, from Latin inveterātus, past participle of inveterārī, to grow old, endure
Comment: It seems this word's etymology is implying to grow old within, which is a form of psychological trickery. The causative prefix means within + vetus, old
~veal-
the meat of a calf, also vealer; a calf raised to be slaughtered for food, Middle English veel, from Old French, from Latin vitellus, diminutive of vitulus, calf
~veteran- innocent children forced to fight and die in wars; Latin veterānus, from vetus, old; to be old within*
Comment: There is a big difference between slowly growing old, and being forced to grow old, and in doing so, destroying the aging process within. Unfortunately, all wars have been illegal, so there is no justification for any war ever except in critical defense of attack. If this attack is falsified, it negates any war as being legal as in the case with most warring. Politicians who lie publicly about dead people and imaginary terrorist who are either dead, patsies, or mercenaries, are also terrorists and traitors. [reference to Osama Bin Laden on recent congressional interviews who is known to be dead and the continued manufacture of an invisible enemy that only attacks on cue.]
~veterinary- related to veterinary medicine, medical or surgical treatment and care of animals, especially domestic animals; Latin veterīnārius, from veterīnae, beasts of burden, from feminine plural of veterīnus, of beasts of burden
Comment: There you have it, veterans are beasts of burden, as they become the very animals veterinarians treat as actual animals. They, the veterinarian, in turn, find a way to relieve the burden of growing old for the inside of animals, while humans become vegetables inside dragged into illegal wars, and have very little help after the fact.
~vitellus- the yolk of an egg, Latin, probably diminutive of vitulus, calf (?), add info
~wether- a castrated ram, Middle English, from Old English, no more data.

This group seems self-explanatory except for the northerly summer winds. It is interesting to say that the yolk of an egg, veal, and summer winds don't seem to be related, yet they all sit together derived from the supposed same meanings or at least some relation in meaning. It may be there is a correlation between our body as compared to our soul, which seemingly would also be contained in the body section, and the difference between veal and the yolk.

But I suspect that etos and other connections will have to be worked out when other root groups are completed that relate directly to more Gregorian roots.

Part eight: Machismo

15-contort-distort-extort-queer-nasturtium1-retort-thwart-torch
-torment-torque-torsade-tort-torticollis1-tortuous-truss-et-terkw- to twist, extension of teræ-, possible variant form *t(w)erk-, [Middle low German dwer, queer, oblique, Old Norse thverr, thwart, transverse, sourced Germanic *thwerh-], twisted, oblique, Suffixed (causative) o-grade form *torkw-eyo-, Latin torquēre, to twist, machismo* (nasturtium2 - nas-) (torticollis2 - kwel-1-)
~contort- to twist, wrench, or bend severely out of shape, to become twisted into a strained shape, distort, Latin contorquēure, contort-, to twist *com-, intensive prefix, see com- + torquēre, to twist
Comment: First, let's look at con-, in opposition or disagreement; and com-, combining, together with. If you are torturing an innocent captive, it is more a con, if you're ringing out the wash, it may be more a com, as you combine the twisted parts equally. If you are a contortionist (body bender), you are likely both con and com.
~distort- twisted out of proportion, misshape, give a false or misleading account of, misrepresent, cause to work in a twisted or disorderly manner, pervert, Latin distorquēre
Comment: Again, we have a phrase tort that is attached to the prefix dis-, where the meaning of dis- is peculiar as most of these do not make sense for this noun tort that implies injury. The only possible meaning could be asunder. The meanings for dis- are: in opposition, undo, remove, disannul, apart, and asunder. It could be said that distort may be a way of applying injury to the mind by created so many pieces to a puzzle, it becomes impossible to reshape any reality.
~extort- to obtain (steal) from another by coercion or intimidation, to steal the feelings of another and use them for personal gain*, Latin extorquēre, extort-, to wrench out
~queer- deviating from expectation, strange, questionable nature, suspicious, fake, counterfeit, Feeling slightly ill, queasy, ruin or thwart, insult, to force another into your feelings, Perhaps from Low German, oblique, off-center, from Middle Low German dwer
Comment: Insulting others as a way of attaching feelings to express that in themselves are strange does not make new strange, it only divides. Also, many things are normally strange, so to assume that the surrounding world and living organisms is not strange is part of the problem. By assuming the existing world is not strange, this contributes to confuse truth that is most certainly considered strange by many who are living the American dream where you are required to sleep to live it. There are many problems in understanding this group as oblique is defined as not transverse.
~nasturtium1- any of the various New World plants of the genus Tropaeolum, having pungent juices and long-spurred, usually yellow, orange, or red irregular flowers; Color: a brilliant orange yellow; Middle English nasturcism, a kind of cress, (examples: pennycress, watercress) from Latin nasturtium : perhaps nāsus, nose; see nas- + tortāre, frequentative of tortquēre, to twist
~retort- retort1: return in kind, retaliate, counter arguing, turning what is said against what was said, bend backwards, caustic, closing the system*, Latin retortquēre, retort-, to bend back; retort2: a closed laboratory vessel with an outlet tube, used for distillation, sublimation, or decomposition by heat, French retorte, from Medieval Latin retorta, from Feminine of Latin retortus, past participle of retortquēre to bend back
~thwart- to prevent the occurrence, realization, or attainment of, oppose and defeat efforts, frustrate; Nautical: the seat across the keel that permits a rower, eager to oppose, especially wrongly, perverse, Archaic: athwart, across, Middle English thwerten, from thwert, across, from Old Norse thvert, neuter of thverr, transverse, [ref: athwart- from side to side, crosswire or transversely, flipping from side to side, contrary, perversely]
Comment: Opposition is necessary for the beasts, then you perceive you must fight them, you may even obsess them, and you end up losing (apocalypse). Think about it. The enemy must have attention, and this attention needs removing in order for peace to exist rather than more oppositions. More growing up with others who remove the attention, the life of the beasts is slowly removed, if at all, in this environment. It is much easier to remove the TV, etc. and begin to oppose in your own way that is not the eager beaver bunker builder or the asinine reveler.
~torch- portable combustion resonating light; wood of ember; flambeau; Chiefly British: flashlight; something that serves to illuminate, enlighten, or guide; portable apparatus producing a hot flame, can be used to weld with hot gases; to cause to burn or undergo combustion, especially with rapidity, force, or thoroughness, Middle English torche, from Old French, from Vulgar Latin *torca, alteration of torqua, variant of torquēs, torque, from Latin torquēre, to twist
~torment- great physical pain or mental anguish, source of harassment, annoyance, torture inflicted upon innocent captives, interrogation as punishment, afflict harm, agitate or upset, pester, Middle English, from Old French, from Latin tormentum (from torquēre, to twist)
Comment: Those authorized people who encounter human evolution are opposing rather than using any common sense or dignity for life. Torture is evil and opposes all unified laws that protect the rights of individuals according to conventions made.
~torque- torque1: the moment of a force, the measure of a force's tendency to produce torsion and rotation about an axis, equal to the vector product of the radius vector from the axis of rotation to the point of application of the force; a turning or twisting force, from Latin torquēre, to twist; torque2: a collar, a necklace, or an armband made of twisted metal, worn by the ancient Gauls, Germans, and Britons; French, from Old French, from Latin torquēs, from torquēre, to twist
~torsade- a decorative trimming of twisted ribbon or cord, used especially on hats, French, from tors, from Vulgar Latin *torsus, alteration of Latin tortus, past participle of torquēre, to twist
~tort- Law: damage, injury, or wrongful act done willfully, negligently, or in circumstances involving strict liability, but not involving breach of contract, for which a civil suit can be brought, Middle English, injury, from Old French, from Medieval Latin, neuter past participle of torquēre
~torticollis1- a contracted state of the neck muscles producing an unnatural position of the head, also called wryneck, New Latin : Latin tortus, twisted, past participle of torquēre, to twist + collum, neck, [see root kwel-1-; cult, machicolation, excessive**] [Notes: crushing the spine and putting out the true fire, removing the head, creating Medusa, tornado head, tor, toque, (wryneck- Jynx torquilla or J. ruficollis; woodpeckers)]
~tortuous- having or marked by repeated turns or bends; winding and twisting; not straighforward, circuitous, devious, highly involved, complex, Middle English, from Anglo-Norman, from Latin tortuōsus, from tortus, a twisting, Usage Note: Although tortuous and torturous both come from the Latin word torquēre, "to twist," their primary meanings are distinct. Tortuous means "twisting" (a tortuous road) or by extension "complex" or "devious". Torturous refers primarily to torture and the pain associated with it,. However, torturous also can be used in sense of "twisted" or "strained", and tortured is an even stronger synonym: tortured reasoning
~truss- wooden or steel beaming that contains rigidity*, Architecture: gathered into a bundle, pack, bracket, framework, Medical: supporting device with a belt for hernia repair; Botany: compact cluster of flowers at the end of a stalk; to bind the legs or skewer the wings of a fowl (animal or bird) before cooking, bracing capable of supporting structure as a truss, Middle English trusse, bundle, from Old French trousse, from torser, trousser, to truss, possibly from Vulgar Latin *torsare, from *torsus, variant of Latin tortus, past participle of torquēre, to twist
Comment: This section needs expanding.

R. Mark Sink  28.6.27
published 2008/06/27

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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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