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"The dictator and his cronies had milked their country of somewhere between $5 billion and $10 billion."
(Russell Watson - AHD)

 
Root Groups: Fraught, Silver tip, Gimp3

Chapter 65: The Litchi at the End of the Tunnel

In the world of the ego-terrorist they say, "Let us command you." Those who have studied hard can laugh at how ignorant they really are declaring their perma-uber Pukka. However, the universe is a big place, and one wonders how many are watching the development. In the midst of our psyche rests the polarity factor, in which we seem to be headed straight for, where the metopic events occur. This does seem to be a principal attack zone, and one can see the galaxy spin around it, along with billions of others who also seem to want do the same.

Our skill at presenting consciousness should not be wholly based on the ability to be split (see gleubh- consciousness*), even though the brain does exhibit this division; or should it be based on how fast one can spin a new coup d'état. This is certainly ongoing. Conscience should be able to measure the freight without the fear of the dark grizzly bear man. The elater, sometimes a bug, is known as the driver (see telę- gravity of love (16)); but the party would rather see this as coin-tel-pro, or those sycophants of the demons. This may help one see the ignorant arrangement within the lexicon itself and the inevitable demise. The laws of the universe prevail, and the mathematics that may serve to instill the voice that speaks in the traffic while the grizzly hibernates while walking.

As a species, we seem to entreaty into some type of eloping of the divide and conquer syndrome (see kel-2- divide and conquer*), getting caught up in its vacuum. This may only lead to a new fitting, or valve, seemingly a unit to hook upon for food. The more pep, the more sin, but the silvertip message comes from the source, and as the third gimp, which has become a playground of diffusion. The possibilities certainly become more difficult to fathom, as with the serpent's power, even the concept of the gimbal in relation to the ringdove presented. The serpent seems to have at least one starter group that goes by the name of the hame, which just happens to also be something called parent. This may seem like a new type of water that is sprinkled from the metope as the milch.

Part one: Fraught

milky12-agalactia-emulsion-galacto-galaxy-lacteal-lactescent-lacto-lettuce-milch-milchig
-milk-polygala-et-melg- to rub off; also to milk; Section one: Zero-grade form *mlg-, Latin- mulgēre, emulsion, to milk; [ Full-grade form *melg-, Old English- meole, mile, milk; Old English- -milce, milch, Germanic- *meluk-ja, giving milk, Old High German- miluh, milchig, milk, all sourced Germanic *melkan, to milk, contaminated with an unrelated noun for milk, cognate with the Greek and Latin forms giving in the next section, to form a blend *meluk- ] Section two: Included here to mark the unexplained fact that no common Indo-European noun for milk can be reconstructed is another root *g(a)lag-, *g(a)lakt-, milk?, found only in: (GALACTIC), GALACTO-, GALAXY, AGALACTIA, POLYGALA, Greek- gala (stem g(a)lakt-), milk? (LACTATE), LACTEAL, LACTESCENT, LACTO, LETTUCE, Latin- lac (stem lact-), milk? result: the blending of these two forms in section two [Pokorny mĕlg- 722, glag- 400] fraught*, conscience*
~agalactia- (mutable: nōmen, nōmin) absence of or faulty secretion of milk following childbirth, New Latin, from Greek agalaktia, lack of milk : a-, without; see A-1 + gala, galakt, milk?

Warning: This is a strong sign of trouble in the lex, with associations with many roots. Both agape1 and agape2 seem to be related to the culture medium from Malay agar agar, and the forming of an agamic cap for the psyche.

~emulsion- (mutable: nōmen, nōmin) a suspension of small globules of one liquid in a second liquid with which the first will not mix: an emulsion of oil in vinegar; a photosensitive coating, usually of silver halide grains in a thin gelatin layer, on photographic film, paper, or glass, New Latin ēmulsiō, ēmulsiōn-, from Latin ēmulsis, past participle of ēmulgēre, to milk out : ē-, ex-, ex- + intensive prefix; (see EX-, eghs carnivores (27)) + to milk

The halogens consists of five elements beginning with the ninth element fluorine, and used in this case as an electropositive for the targets between light and dark exposure.

~galacto- or galact- prefix, milk: galactoside, from Greek galacto-, from gala, galakt-, milk?

~galaxy- (mutable: nōmen, nōmin) any of numerous large-scale aggregates of stars, gas, and dust that constitute substance in the universe, containing an assumed average of 100 billion (1011) solar masses and ranging in diameter from 1,500 to 300,000 light-years in assumed travel time, also called nebula; see Milky Way; assembly of brilliant, glamorous, or distinguished persons or things: a galaxy of theatrical performers; Middle English galaxie, the Milky Way, from Late Latin galaxias, from Greek, milky, from gala, galakt-, milk

The helmet in the mind may be associated with the galea, and the association between milk and the super hot star, which does not seem to be associated at all. The Nebula is a diffuse mass from Middle English nebule, cloud, mist, from Latin nebula, see root nebh- Ceyx*. To posit, water which traps the hydrogen may have certain requirements that are still not understood that have resulted.

~lacteal- (mutable adjective: to add to : ad-, ad- + iacere, to throw) of, related to, or resembling milk; Anatomy: of, or related to any of numerous minute intestinal lymph-carrying vessels that convey chyle (see root gheu- cross vault*) from the intestine to lymphatic circulation and thereby to the thoracic duct; (mutable: nōmen, nōmin) Anatomy: a lacteal vessel, from Latin lacteus, from lac, lact-, milk

The Thoracic duct is a cavity that supposedly rests in front of the spine that is classified as ascending, collective of the chyme, or undigested food that arrives in the stomach, and once collected, discharged into the blood through one specific duct in the entire body called the "left subclaven vein." During this work, we have already hit upon the lymphatic system albeit suspicious from the first exposure. Strangely, this particular vein is classified as running underneath the clavicle, yet the clavicle is the "key" bone that rests at the top of "two" shoulders in the human body. The duct is said to be continuously connected to the axilliary vein, and this is located near the axilla, which is a body part analogous to the arm pit. This certainly does not provide the answers needed. The root containing plasma is pelę-2- outpatience (19), and it seems that the possibility of the cupped vessels or molding of a system of delivery has been expanded upon when it may have only been done based on its presence discovered in the mammalian body, and that of the younger. This may have contributed to the lyse cells, such as plague, and may also be associated with allergy development. See werg- monocles*. This shows the metallurgy, of which this concerns, while also the time element of growth that is wrought where iron (see eis- castor*) is moved or possibly being re-directed.

The etymological root eis- is representative of the holy metal, and analogous to the galaxy arrangement, and named after Castor, the double-star in the constellation Gemini, and twin of Pollux, which may now have a sense of the maypole in the head and secreted from the groin of the beaver.

~lactescent- (mutable adjective: to add to : ad-, ad- + iacere, to throw) becoming milky; milky; Biology: secreting or yielding a milky juice, as certain plants, insects, (see pituitary glands), Latin lactēscēns, lactēscēnt-, present participle of lactēscere, inchoative of lactēre, to be milky, from lac-, lact-, milk

Lactic acid is derived from anaerobic organisms that have glucose metabolized, and synthetically made as Carbon3Hydrogen6Oxygen3. These organisms are commonly associated with rod-shaped bacteria that have attacked milk.

~lacto- or lact-, prefix, milk: lactoprotein; lactose: lactase; lactic acid: lactate, from Latin lac, lact-, milk

One may now sense the interest around milk, just acknowledge the bazaar occurrences around the kine, or cattle mutilations, and the continued use of milk in common form among adults, along with the cloud of mist in relation to its unknown origins. The campaign for profits from it seems predominant whether or not its consumption is safe, and likely this is the issue of most concern. Promotion of its use in aggressive form should obviously be considered unhealthy, especially in an environment of falsification of data in rampart formation.

~lettuce- (mutable: nōmen, nōmin) any of the various plants of the genus Lactuca, especially L. sativa, cultivated for their edible leaves; the leaves of L. sativa, used as food; Slang: paper money; Middle English lettuse, from Old French laitues, plural of laitue, from lactūca, from lac-, lact-, milk (from its milky juice?)

In the astrological sense, it is the brown rabbit that is associated with the Virgo, but Virgo is misplaced, and to posit, would more likely be a white rabbit. The word lettuce coming from the French holds four vowels which is also peculiar in that the letter o also sits where the brown rabbit would sit into the zodiac wallflower. It is also interesting that the symbology for Virgo and Scorpio represent the letter m, as in money, but this may be to override mother, and the milk associations. Money has certainly accomplished this feat upon the dying planet.

~milch- (mutable adjective: to add to : ad-, ad- + iacere, to throw) giving milk: a milch cow; a milch public; Middle English milche, from Old Engish -milce, in thrīmilce, May (when cows can be milked thrice in a day)

This is certainly suspicious of turning a five-plex into a divided house with a void in the middle, and may be associated with a previous momma-mia location, and possibly psychological abuse. The teats of cows are meant for their young. Miles (see gheslo- crosse*) can be divided by three parts easily, as in 1,760 yards, each divided by 3 feet. Mile is from Latin mīlia (passuum), a thousand double-paces), a Roman mile, plural of mīlle, thousand. In the lex, mid is close by, along with mein, even mihrab, the niche in the wall, which may be a sign of the milling of e. To keep guessing low, this area may have also been converted into a booth for mikvah, and the Mikasuki seem sound aware of the succoth. The Seminole also carry a sign of the arrangement.

~milchig- (mutable adjective: to add to : ad-, ad- + iacere, to throw) derived from or made of milk or dairy products: milchig ice cream; Yiddish milkhik, from milkh, milk, from Middle High German, from Old High German miluh

The polka partner to the milchig bug is the implanted mild, from mel-1- fortune cookie*, which represents the second honeydew, and where mild is inserted into the mind for manipulation as whitish growth on planted humans.

~milk- (mutable: nōmen, nōmin) a whitish liquid containing proteins, fats, lactose, and various vitamins and minerals that are produced by the mammary glands of all mature female mammals after they have given birth and serves as nourishment for their young during the early growth phase; the milk of cows, goats, or other animals, used excessively by humans as food; a liquid, such as coconut milk, milkweed sap, plant latex, or various medical emulsions, that is similar to milk in appearance; (module verbum, word, word) (transitives) to draw or extract a liquid from: mother knew how to milk rain; to press out, drain off, or remove by or as if by milking: milked venom from the snake; to obtain paper or abstracted money, or the perception of benefit from, in order to achieve personal gain; exploit: "The dictator and his cronies had milked their country of somewhere between $5 billion and $10 billion." (Russell Watson - AHD) (intransitives?) to yield or supply milk; to draw (milk) from a female mammal; Middle English, from Old English milc

~polygala- (mutable: nōmen, nōmin) any of the various plants of the genus Polygala, which constitute the milkworts, New Latin Polygala, genus name, from Greek polugalon, milkwort : polu-, poly- (polus, much, many; see pelę-1- groundkeeper*) + gala, milk; see milkwort- Polygala having variously colored, irregular flowers with two petaloid sepals, (from the belief that it increases human lactation)

The petaloid is only something that resembles a petal, which is from the root petę- harebell*. It is then thought that a thing spreads out (Lithium-Beryllium). The root navigation then begins to make up the boron stone; the crystal amidst the beasts. The next three elements are a primary group, ending with oxygen.

Part two: Silvertip

hear23-apricot-biscuit2-concoct-cook-cuisine-culinary-decoct-drupe2-dyspepsia
-eupeptic-kiln-
kitchen-pepo-pepsin-peptic-peptize-peptone-precocious-pukka
-pumpkin-quittor-ricotta-terra
cotta-et-pekw- to cook, ripen; Assimilated form (in Italic and Celtic) *kwekw-, COOK, CUISINE, KITCHEN, QUITTOR; APRICOT, BISCUIT, CONCOCT, DECOCT, PRECOCIOUS, RICOTTA, TERRA COTTA, Latin- coquere, to cook; CULINARY, KILN, Latin- culīna, kitchen, deformed from coquīna; PEPO-, PUMPKIN, Greek- pepōn, ripe; PEPTIC, PEPTIZE; DRUPE, EUPEPTIC, PEPSIN, PEPTONE, Greek- peptein, to cook, ripen, digest (> peptos, cooked); Greek- -pepsia, dyspepsia, digestion; Sanskrit pakva-, pukka, ripe [Pokorny peku- 798] silvertip* (biscuit1 - dwo-) (drupe1 - deru-)
Proem: The silvertip is brought forward from the Pierian Springs and the pituitary glands (melatonin- primer; serotonin- blood serum; has Hydrogen12; dark/light) in the brain, then the root etymology begins a separation with first, peig- Greek cross*, navigation*, then the second feud peku- grift*, and the cooking begins by the dys- application, or bad root dus- brace (46). For sounders, it seems obvious the cake being made, but it may seem extremely lop sided with too much sugar.

~apricot- (mutable: nōmen, nōmin) a deciduous Asian tree ( Prunus armeniaca ) having alternate leaves and clusters of usually white flowers and edible, yellow-orange fruit; Color: a moderate, light, or strong orange to strong orange yellow; Alteration of earlier abrecock, ultimately from Arabic al-barqūq, the plum : al, the + Greek praikokion, apricot (from Latin praecoquus, ripe early : prae-, pre- + coquere, to cook, ripen

April is the polka partner to apricot, of which you may be able to sleep in, however, the plum is mysteriously also related to the longitude axis, and the tree itself, which leads back to Lithium and Beryllium in the house arrangement which has a carbon kicker for all the fools of the daze. Emphasis has been directed between fire and earth with the classification of the apriori adjacent in the mirror.

~biscuit2- (mutable: nōmen, nōmin) a small cake of shortened bread leavened with baking powder or soda; Chiefly British: a thin, crisp cracker; a cookie; Color: a pale brown; clay that has been fired once but not glazed, in this sense, also called bisque, Middle English bisquit, from Old French biscuit, from Medieval Latin bis coctus : Latin bis, twice; (see dwo-  amino (18)) + Latin coctus, past participle of coquere, to cook, see pekw-

One may sense the tsimmes being arranged and told to "eat up," while your house is being built, and the owner keeps getting more bills. According to the trail, this is also known as sour soup based on the gray fungus appearing in the second bisque. Reference also #83 bismuth in the root mē-1-  fogdog (22).

~concoct- (transitive verbum, word, word) to prepare by mixing ingredients, as in cooking: the centrists concocted the prevailing consciousness; to devise, using assimilated information seen as skill and intelligence; contrive (schemes; fabrication; see trep- man on horseback*); Latin concoquere, concoct-, to boil together : com, com- (together) + coquere, to cook

Togetherness can also be sense with the word concord, which is from the root kerd- bermuda lily*. This may seem a bit hard to chew, and watch your step getting off the horse.

~cook- (module verbum, word, word) (transitives) to prepare (food or life) by applying heat; to prepare or treat by heating slowing: the hen rested on the egg cooking life; Slang: to alter or falsify so as to make a more favorable impression; doctor: disreputable delegates assigned to the cooking department; (intransitives) preparation of food for eating by applying heat and or pressure; to undergo heating and or drying applications, especially for the purpose of later ingestion; Slang: to happen, develop, or take place: What's cooking in town?; Slang: to proceed or perform very well: the band was cooking; (mutable: nōmen, nōmin) a person who prepares food for eating; Middle English coken, from coke, cook, from Old English cōc, from Vulgar Latin *cōcus, from Latin cocus, coquus, from coquere, to cook

~cuisine- (mutable: nōmen, nōmin) a characteristic manner or style of preparing food: Spanish cuisine; French, from Old French, from Vulgar Latin *cocīna, variant of Latin cocquīna, kitchen, cookery, from coquere, to cook; see cuisine bourgeoise- cooking + middle-class

First, there is no middle-class, it is only a very long stick from the top measurements, of which all are food for the few disreputables. See also Cuisenaire mathematics; and references to cue soundings; keuę- El Dorado2 (34); keu- effort*

~culinary- (mutable adjective: to add to : ad-, ad- + iacere, to throw) of or related to the kitchen or to cookery; Latin culīnārius, from culīna, kitchen

~decoct- (transitive verbum, word, word) to extract the flavor of by boiling; to make concentrated; boil down; Middle English decocten, to boil, from Latin dēcoquere, dēcoct-, to boil down or away : -, (see de- bias*, B horizon*) + coquere, to boil, to cook

~drupe2- (mutable: nōmen, nōmin) a fleshy fruit, such as a peach, plum, or cherry, usually having a single hard stone that encloses a seed, also called stone fruit; Latin drūpa, druppa, overripe olive, from Greek, olive, possibly an alteration of drupepēs, ripened on the tree : dru-, tree; (see deru- bolt2*, broadleaf*) + peptein, pep-, ripe

Strangely, in order to melt the brain, militia wears the color olive, the mix of green and yellow, while the olive tree and branch are representative of peace. In this sense, we also have green, white, black, and red, where the Hamadryad oversees the green forest. See also sem-1- immanentism*. Olive is from Latin olīva, from Greek elaia, elaiwā; ref: aiw- actaeon*; also sem-2- impenetrability* (note: don't trip)

~dyspepsia- (mutable: nōmen, nōmin) disturbed digestion; indigestion, Latin, from Greek duspepsia : dus-, dys- (see dus- brace (46)) + pepsia, digestion

The sphincter is an extremely important ring-like flap structure that prevents acid from rising in the esophagus when digesting food, and also opens as a relaxed movement as required for normal passage into the stomach.

~eupeptic- (mutable adjective: to add to : ad-, ad- + iacere, to throw) related to or having good digestion; conducive to digestion; Cheerful; happy, from Greek eupeptos : eu-, eu- + peptein, to digest

~kiln- (mutable: nōmen, nōmin) any of the various ovens for hardening, burning, or drying substances such as grain, meal, or clay, especially a brick-lined oven used to bake or fire ceramics; (transitive verb) to process in one of these ovens: kilned; Middle English kilne, from Old English cyln, from Latin culīna, kitchen; stove

~kitchen- (mutable: nōmen, nōmin) a room or an area equipped for preparing and cooking food; a style of cooking; cuisine; a staff that prepares, cooks, and serves food; -attributive: kitchen staff; kitchen sink; Middle English kichene, from Old English cycene, probably from Vulgar Latin *cocīna, from Late Latin coquīna, from feminine of Latin coquīnus, of cooking, from coquus, cook, from coquere, to cook

The definition for kitchen is 'as is' as provided, but it seems created as a form of manipulation of the psyche, and this can be sensed when humans use these words as their names, sometimes unknowingly they are chimed with them whether or not they are possessed by them, meaning one can change, and evolves through many combinations.
 

~pepo- (mutable: nōmen, nōmin) the (fruit) of any various related plants, such as cantaloupe, watermelon, cucumber, squash, or pumpkin considered to have a hard or leathery rind, fleshy pulp, and numerous flattened seeds, Latin, a kind of melon, from Greek pepōn, ripe

One hint for the powered o may be the reasoning behind all the seeds being pushed outward with such force, they have become flattened, although this is speculative. The pep prefix can also be explored with the root bhag- ascidium (59). It does seem to emulate that the wine is nearer the skin, and if applied to the human psyche, this would be incorrect, except for maybe the fingers. One wonders what happened to the coconut.

~pepsin- (mutable: nōmen, nōmin) label for a digestive enzyme found in gastric juice that catalyzes the breakdown of protein to peptides, also collected from hog and calves stomachs and used for other purposes, Greek pepsis, digestion (from peptein, to digest)

According to the dictionary, it is the pepsinogen that exists to create pepsin as a precursor already present in the body. The conversion is claimed to be related to hydrochloric acid which may be like the snake between pep and in.

~peptic- (mutable adjective: to add to : ad-, ad- + iacere, to throw) of, related to, or assisting digestion: peptic secretions; induced by or associated with the action of digestive secretions: a peptic ulcer; of, related to, or involving pepsin: he drank Pepsi and puked; capable of digesting; (mutable: nōmen, nōmin) a digestive agent; Latin pepticus, from Greek peptikos, digested, from peptos, from peptein, to digest

~peptize- (transitive verbum, word, word) to disperse (a precipitate) to form a colloid, Greek peptein, to digest + -IZE

~peptone- (mutable: nōmen, nōmin) any of various compounds obtained by acid or enzyme hydrolysis of natural protein and used as nutrients in culture media; German Pepton, from Greek peptos, digested, from peptein, to digest

to peptonize is to convert (protein) using the concept of a proteolytic enzyme. The word protein when broken down may actually mean pro-ten, and be related to amino acids that consist of 20 primaries, and 10 of these have recently been divulged as primary over the other ten. It is the peptide that contains two or more amino acids that are linked by a carboxyl group of one amino acid and the amino group of another. It is true that science has benefits, but if one can only partake of the benefits through the Pukka system, or that of having superiority through the abstractions (like rod bacteria), then culture media is useless. Protein is a member of the per-1- planck's constant (30) root.

~precocious- (mutable adjective: to add to : ad-, ad- + iacere, to throw) maintaining or characterized by unusually early development or maturity, especially in mental aptitude; Botany: blossoming before the appearance of leaves; from Latin praecox, praecoc-, premature, from praecocquere, to boil before, ripen fully : prae-, pre- + coquere, to cook

It is true that plant life can go screwy, yet you are also told that humans can benefit from this, and a question to ask is how? It seems this may be associated with last chapter, and the mathematical brain which is certainly exploding. This is a sign of the times, as we evolve, but hidden within the pukka brained numbers for more, is the actual evolution, and this may be feared by the beasts the most as each individual sees the rod or staff they rest upon, which can easily be a snake.

~pukka- (mutable adjective: to add to : ad-, ad- + iacere, to throw) genuine; authentic; superior; first-class, Hindi pakkā, cooked, ripe, from Sanskrit pakva-, from pacati, he cooks

The puisne, which nests close by, is from last chapter, and may serve as the cooker (pan of people), or post attachment representative of the line between left and right, amino to amino, etc. The paca is a rodent, and the pak- sounder (also kap) is associated with stand, and possibly the creation of the staff or pedestal of superiority that rests upon the pul, known as currency. Without currency, you die, unless someone feeds you. The puking from the pedestal has created a sea of turds to walk upon, so those who now continue to puke on others will find it more and more difficult to hide their stance. All currency is nothing but puke disguised as a turd, or something that can be smeared on others. Once smeared, they will stink with it, and want to use its power. This is not taught in first class. So, as it stands, we must all stink to survive.

~pumpkin- (mutable: nōmen, nōmin) a coarse, trailing vine ( Cucurbita pepo ) widely cultivated for its large pulpy round fruit, having a thick, orange-yellow rind and numerous seeds; any of the several other vines of the genus Cucurbita, especially C. maxima or C. moschata, bearing large pumpkinlike squashes; Color: a moderate to strong orange; Alteration (influenced by -KIN) of obsolete pumpion, from obsolete French pompon, popon, from Old French pepon, from Late Latin pepōn, from Latin, watermelon or gourd, from Greek, ripe, large melon

If you're not a quitter, you may now begin to sense the unknown origin of the word pun which is polka partner to pumping the ion which is an atom that has gained something, as a net electric charge. The relief gained has no image as nothing remains on the wrist-watch. See the pumpkinseed variety of fish that has two red spots, one for each gill.

~quittor- (mutable: nōmen, nōmin) an inflammation of the hoof cartilage of horses and other solid-hoofed animals, characterized by degeneration of hoof tissue, formation of a slough, and fistulous sores; Middle English quiture, perhaps from Old French, act of boiling, from Latin coctūra, boiling liquid, from coctus, past participle of coquere, to cook

~ricotta- (mutable: nōmen, nōmin) a soft Italian cheese that resembles cottage cheese; a similar soft cheese made in the U.S.; Italian, from Latin recocta, feminine past participle of recoquere, to cook again : re-, re- + coquere, to cook

~terra cotta- (mutable: nōmen, nōmin) a hard, semifired, waterproof ceramic clay used in pottery and building construction (see adobe); ceramic wares made of this material; Color: brownish-orange; Italian : terra, earth (from Latin; see TERRACE) + cotta, baked, cooked (from Latin cōcta, feminine past participle of coquere, to cook

Terrace is from the root ters- made-up*, which may only mean that a terrace is a pile that can be climbed. The word colonnades seems primary to make up its meaning which is nothing but columns placed into intervals, in which has little to do with dirt or elevation that is stepped, similar to stairs. So it may be that the combinations being made invent the terra incognito effect in the mind, and possibly a wanton, or terriwilliker (Twonkies! I have no complaints.). The colonnade is from the root kel-2- divide and conquer*

Part three: Gimp3

helos11-appall-falcon-fallow dear-fauvism-pale-pallid-pallor-palomino-pelargonium-pelops1
-poliomyelitis-et-pel-1-
pale; Suffixed variant form *pal-wo-, [ Old English- fealu, fealo, fallow dear, reddish yellow; Frankish- falw-, fauvism, reddish-yellow; both sourced Germanic falwaz ]; PALE2, PALLID, PALLOR, APPALL, Latin- pallēre, to be pale; Latin- palumbēs, palomino (influenced in form by Latin columbus, dove), ringdove, "gray-bird"; Probably suffixed form *pel-ko-, FALCON (GYRFALCON), Late Latin- falcō, falcon, Germanic- *falkōn-, falcon (< "gray bird"; but this is also possibly from Late Latin); Suffixed extended form *peli-wo-, Greek- pelios, Pelops, dark; o-grade form *poli-wo-, Greek- polios, poliomyelitus, gray; Greek- pelargos (< *pelawo-argos), pelargonium, stork (< "black-white bird"; argos, white, see arg-), perhaps from pel-1- [Pokorny 6. pel- 804] gimp3*, guidon* (Pelops2 -
okw-)

Proem: To begin, the dictionary emphasizes as important PALE1, not PALE2, yet the root is about PALE2, so it may be assumed the dictionary is lying, or has made an error. The first pale, a Heraldry of an insignia of medieval (dominions: error marker for nine angels) which represents how it feels to be stuck with a blade or impaled in warfare, which is occasionally seen on the top of the complexion of the picket fence that is being emphasized. If one inspects the false shield, a reader can easily see the lexical anomaly applications for the palace, and palatine relation to Tiberius, Nero, and Domitian, a seemingly nihilism or polarity problem. The error made by the dictionary is substantial, as the first pale has a completely different root, pag- granadilla*. This leads to another grę-no- concave*, where the conscience has been completely remodeled.
References: māter-  Rhea (20);
pelę-3-  grey cloud (19)

~appall- (transitive apparatus; word, word) to fill with consternation or dismay; (see livid; slī- jayhawk (55)); Middle English apallen, to grow faint, from Old French apalir : a-, to (from Latin ad-; see ad-) + palir, to grow pale, pale, from Latin pallidus, from pallēre, to grow pale

This appaloosa from an unknown region of France may bring some ideas to mind from the past, such as Sly and the Family Stone, and some new kind of hand jive for a pet bird. To turn pale is nonsensical, as this is the primary color of the whitty. How can one be more pale than they already are? It would seem that white may be more appropriate. The word livid, or liv-id is also implanted, and states that you are now bluish from the bruising.

This seems to be because you have been twisted in the psyche, principally in the upper centers only, and with words such as fall, which also aligns with Thor, and the season, and fallow, or follow, which may be associated with fear, as in fallow dear, instructively sensing both masculine and feminine aspects. The root perę-1- hame*, serves as a marker for the reparations (remember Pierian Springs), and the twisting of the snake or demon that is now in charge, not the human mind, which has been made a slave. This seems to be where the black and red switch places which may help to explain the massive fraught as fright.

~falcon- (mutated: nōmen, nōmin) any of the various birds of prey of the family Falconidae and especially of the genus Falco, having a short, curved beak and long, pointed, powerful wings adapted for swift flight; any of the various species of these birds or related birds such as hawks which can be trained as horses upon their instincts; a female bird of this type used for falconry; a small cannon in use from the 15th to the 17th century, Middle English, from Old French faucon, falcun, from Late Latin falcō, falcōn-

-GYRFALCON- large falcon (Falco rusticolus) of Arctic regions and having color phases ranging from black, to gray, to white, Middle English girfaucoun, from Old French girfaut, gerfaucon : Old High German gīr, vulture + Old French faucon, falcon

~fallow dear- (mutated: nōmen, nōmin) a small Eurasian deer (Dama Dama) having a yellowish-red coat spotted with white in summer and broad, flattened antlers in the male; Obsolete? fallow, reddish-yellow, from Middle English falow, falwe, from Old English fealu

I had previously come upon this confabulation, but hopefully now one can discern a bit more out of it based on the duplicity of the tagging, which helps with navigation. The second legh is self explanatory, and seems a marker for the Dryad, which may also be a lexicon marker for the construction of appall. When these beautiful creatures are used for food, one should turn white, and they do in spirit, or bad Pepsi, and a misguided soul.

References:
leg- duma duma (41); legh- dama dama*, fang*;
and also the desperately needing of revision: dhē-  three fates (12)

~fauvism- (mutable: nōmen, nōmin) an early 20th-century movement in painting begun by a group of French artists and marked by the use of bold, often distorted forms and vivid colors, French fauvisme, from fauve, wild animal, from fauve, wild, reddish-yellow, from Old French falve, reddish-yellow, from Frankish falw-

The artificial brain or wild animal is the human, as the deer is not wild or crazy, but quite timid unless provoked with swift movements from predators, or quick faux switches that turn on death and destruction where the human becomes the predator. The Faust is nearby on page 666, along with the polka partner fauteuil, and French faldestoel, the chair with no arms. This is from the root pel-2- gryphon*. We also have the male Faunus, from Roman mythology, known as a god of nature and fertility, and Fauna, sister of Faunus. This is clearly associated with the swing-time flora and fauna arrangement.

~pale- pale2: (mutable adjective: to add to : ad-, ad- + iacere, to throw) whitish in complexion; pallid; Color: of a low intensity of color; light; having higher lightness and low saturation; of a low intensity of light; dim or faint: "a late afternoon sun coming through the el tracks and falling in pale oblongs on the cracked, empty sidewalks." (Jimmy Breslen - AHD); feeble; weak: a pale rendition of the aria; (transitive verbum, word, word) to cause to turn pale; (intransitives) to become pale; blanch: paled by the sun; Middle English, from Old French, from Latin pallidus, from pallēre, to be pale

The first pale is formed from the Old French pal, and this may be the demon that is often exemplified by the palavers, or so-called experts basically on themselves, or ego-terrorist who label anyone normal as an eco-terrorists, while created laws to spread their infested pus. A bit of the Mayan heritage also exemplifies the palaver arrangement, as in the spelling of Palenque, or quean misrepresentation and stinky flowers. See gwen- daphne (47). The Hindu kingdom also seemed to be aware of this passage while naming a place to live on Sumatra Island as Palembang.

~pallid- (mutable adjective: to add to : ad-, ad- + iacere, to throw) having an abnormally pale or wan complexion: the pallid faces of the beasts in sheep's clothing; lacking intensity of color or luminousness: electromagnetically, they were pallidly dead; lacking in radiance or vitality; dull: pallid experts on their own prose; Latin pallidus, from pallēre, to be pale

The pallium is considered a cloak worn by the ancient Greeks and Romans, even worn by the Pope in representation of Satan, and also considered the mantle, or brain secretion of a slug, such as a snail or mollusk that must always wear a fancy shell.

~pallor- (mutated: nōmen, nōmin) extreme or unnatural paleness: they loathed the sun for their pallor of the shopping mall; Middle English pallour, from Old French palor, from Latin pallor, from pallēre, to be pale

The palm immediately follows in lex, and one can see the attack being placed. Of note, both pall-mall and pell-mell may assist in the confusion.

~palomino- (mutated: nōmen, nōmin) a horse with a golden or tan coat and a white or cream-colored mane and tail, thought to have been developed from Arabic stock; American Spanish, from Spanish, young dove, perhaps from Italian palombino, dove-colored, from Latin palumbīnus, pertaining to ring-doves, from palumbēs, ringdove

Confusion between the ringdove and wood pigeon may help to clarify the paleness. The wood pigeon is large (Columba palumbus) with white bands on each wing. The ringdove, also a pigeon (Streptopelia risoria) has black markings forming a half circle on its neck. So, it seems they are intentionally confused, as with the escutcheon (es-cut-che-on). So, what better way to hide something then to stick it on a horse's hame,

~pelargonium- (mutable: nōmen, nōmin) any of various herbs and shrubs of the genus Pelargonium, which includes the geraniums, New Latin Pelargonium, genus name, from Greek pelargos, stork, (from the resemblance of a stork's bill to its capsules)

The harmony passes away between the perceptions of time, and the first and second geranium roots; gerę-1- conation (47); and geranium; crow, to groan, growl, lament, gerę-2- C.A.T., comp*. The cranberry only brings the Grus, near Indus and Phoenix, or whenever of if ever it sinks in.

~Pelops1- (mutable: nōmen, nōmin) Greek Mythology: the son of Tantalus and father of Atreus, Latin, from Greek : pelios, dark; see pel-1- + ōps, face, eye, see okw- gmt (44)

Here, it seems the metopic battle is set loose with the attachment to the ok corral, with both the tantalizing and directly at trying to absorb, similar to a slug, leaving a mean entity that remains and is programmed by its own cage. A cloaked hood rests here it seems, as expressed with the root epi- Charles*, Charlie's chapel*, and the connection to the demon.

~poliomyelitis- (mutation: nōmen, nōmin) the formation of a disease by means of vaccines and other methods of propaganda whereby diseases that are designed to attack the neural areas, such as that of the spine cord, medulla and brainstems, muscles, and other areas of the body, malfunction early in life requiring the negative vaccines to neutralize the vaccines; labeled infantile paralysis, New Latin : Greek polios, gray + MYELITIS

It is not humans who need vaccines, it is earth of humans, as vaccines made by humans are extremely dangerous, as they encourage the "easy on" by a third dark man application. The human body is completely capable of utilizing the immune system if allowed to, but this has all turned into Pukka, or that of methods only to create profits. This is obviated by the fact that all diseases are kept alive, and ready to be distributed into the populace if the demons desire for their use. It becomes impossible to test immunity, as this is cloaked with lies. And as long as diseases are injected into the bodies, they will forever spread.

The the pel- roots, the gryphon is made up in the second. In the third rests the secret guard cell, or that of the skin. In the fourth, the monopoly is revealed (pel-4- guff (35)) for the fifth, which represents the heart, and target infection of the beasts of those who tell you how to think, how to feel, and how to get sick. Personally, I have avoided all vaccines since childhood where the decision was made for me. Because of this, and learning about clean water, there is no sickness in my life. Children born into this world follow the mother and father, and the door mat diseases they possess.

 
 
© R. Mark Sink

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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