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"Men
still spoke of peace but girded more sternly for war"
(W. Bruce Lincoln - AHD)
Chapter Forty Seven:
China Rose - Walking tables in the House
November 21, 2008: The following paragraphs were
written a week ago, as I was approaching this chapter, and
wanted to gather up the gods, so to speak. Today, in
zoonological terms, we walk into the ninth house of
Sagittarius, where feasts and orgies abound, and this may be
analogical to the Medusas, or the three gorgons in the
psyche, where only the dry dock remains powered by the
invisible hippo.
Let's get back to the mythological trail. In this
week's venture, the centaury carries the head of Medusa in
for an immediate strip search and repair job, and it is by
chance, it is the centaur named Chiron, who is not
like the other centaurs except his body, who tutored Jason
(of the Argonauts) and Archilles in the art of riding. He
then is strangely injured by a particular poison arrow
of Hercules whereby his immortality is ridden, and he gives
it to Prometheus, a Titan who stole fire from Olympus and
gave it to humankind, which Zeus tied him to a rock and sent
an eagle to eat his liver which grew back daily. This
becomes the god or father of the arts and sciences.
He is then set in the sky by Zeus as the constellation
Sagittarius, also known as the archer. (I will create a
avatar and misc. for this when I get time so it can be seen without
the lines.) In this continuing rabbit hunt through the
constellations, it gets interesting for sure.
In keeping up with the vibrations and so forth, I began to
chase down a few mythological gods, and then they begin to
come together in strange ways, so I'll just try to keep up.
We take a look at Mensa* in this chapter, from
the root weik-1- which is between
Hydrus and Volans in the Southern Hemisphere, and if aligned
properly may represent the mensch (see man-1-), the human
being, a fortitude of purpose similar to a table with four
legs. This is also the androecium, the man's house. The
Volans rests in the polar region of the Southern Hemisphere
near Carina and Dorado and means "to fly".
Hydrus is also
south near Tucana and Mensa, and rooted to
wed-1-. Before jumping into that,
Centaurus is also in the south by Vela and Lupus.
So, it was Euterpe who I was actually chasing, the Muse of
lyric poetry, and music. And, she is likely to be associated
in lex to Terpsichore, the Muse of dancing and choral
singing who is a lex-root partner to the tiny bird,
the ortolan, who undoubtedly is a singer. According to some
of the Grecian epic text at Theoi.com: "The Mousai sang who
dwell on Olympos, nine daughters begotten by great Zeus,
Kleio and Euterpe, Thaleia, Melpomene and Terpsikhore, and
Erato and Polyhymnia and
Ourania and Kalliope."
Well, that's another 4 by 9 mystery ahead. Lest we forget
Europa, the Phoenician princess who Zeus was chasing, who
could easily change into a white bull, mother of Minos,
Rhadamanthis, and Sarpedon, also one of the four brightest
stars of Jupiter, and seventh in distance from
the planet. Galileo had a hand in naming Europa, who just
might be associated with Daphne*, who also
arrives in the root gwen-;
gynoecium, the queen, and the woman's house. It is she that
metamorphosed into a laurel tree as a means of
escaping from Apollo. Also nearby is Daphnis, the Sicilian
shepherd, a son of Hermes, who was famed for his music, and
reputed inventor of pastoral poetry.
A few more Greek gods to track
are listed, so in deeper we go, it is Euryale who is a
sister of Medusa and
Stheno, one of the Three Gorgons. Then there is Eurus
who is the god of the east, or southeast wind. There is also
Eurydice, the wife of Orpheus, whom he failed to rescue from
Hades when he looked back at her, and so violated the
command of Pluto on their journey back to the
upper world of the living. It does seem odd that Lot's wife
turned to stone, and also, if you look at Medusa, you also
turn to stone, and it just seems like her head needs
fixing. It also seems the chiro, or Chiron, or possibly the horse
led handbook, from chapter 11, which just happened to be
sitting next to Medusa for 9 months, was enough surgery on
both hemispheres. Medusa has vanished, and we have the
criosphinx, which may just be a double flute, and
Cronus*,
the original Titan, before Zeus came along, who ruled the
Universe. This may be analogical to the masculine cosmic
principle of the Chinese sun, as in light, or knowledge, not
necessarily in dual, as thought of as yang, but in solar balance
with the yin, and the adjacent feminine moon and emotional
shade. So off we go into the forest.
In the first group, we find that one
section has been added to the root listing.
Old French- hangard, hangar, shelter, possibly from Germanic *haimgardaz
(*haimaz, home; see tkei-); (also see
medhyo-); and this seems stressed on the
tkei-
root, but the word hangar is not a member of this group, so
it is an unusual extra emphasis to explore.
Part one:
Cronus
19-choragus1-choric-chorus-cohort-cortege-court-courtesan-garden-garth
-gird-girdle-girth-hora-horticulture-kindergarten1-orchard-ortolan
-terpsichore-yard-et-gher-1- to grasp,
enclose, with derivatives meaning 'enclosure", Suffixed
zero-grade form *ghr-dh-, Old English-
gyrdan, gird1, to gird, Germanic- *gurdjan, Old
English- gyrdel, girdle, Old Norse- gjördh, girdle, girth,
Suffixed o-grade form *ghor-to- or (in Germanic) *ghor-dho-,
an enclosure, [ YARD2, ORCHARD, Old
English- geard, enclosure, garden, yard, Old Norse-
gardhr, garth, garage, yard, Old High German- garto,
kindergarten, garden,
Old French- hangard, hangar, shelter, possibly from Germanic *haimgardaz
(*haimaz, home; see tkei-); (also see
medhyo-); Germanic compound *midja-garaz, "middle zone",
earth, sourced Germanic *gardaz ]; Latin- hortus,
horticulture, ortolon, garden, Prefixed
and suffixed zero-grade form *ko(m)-ghr-ti- (*ko(m)-,
collective prefix "together"' see kom-);
COHORT, CORTEGE, COURT, (COURTEOUS), COURTESAN, (COURTESY),
(COURTIER), (CURTILAGE), (CURTSY), Latin- cohors (stem cohort-), enclosed
yard, company of soldiers, multitude, Perhaps suffixed o-grade
form *ghor-o-, (CHOIR), (CHORAL), (CHORALE), CHORIC,
(CHORISTER), CHORUS, HORA; CHORAGUS, TERPSICHORE, Greek khoros,
dancing ground ( ? perhaps originally a special enclosure for
dancing), dance, dramatic chorus, criosphinx*, Cronus*,
Chiron*, (choragus2 - ag-) (kindergarten2 - genæ-)
(photo © NASA) |
|
~choragus1- one who undertook the
expense of providing the chorus in ancient Greek drama;
leader of a group or movement, Latin, from Greek khoragos :
khoros, chorus (see root gher-1-) +
agein, to lead, (see root ag-)
~choric-
of or related to a chorus, Late Latin choricus, from
Greek khorikos, from khoros, choral dance
Our dance with the environment
around us may in fact be more about the critical state*, as
in physics in analogy to the chorion, which is rooted
to gheræ-, which is just a fancy name for
well. The critical point* may have something to do with the
concept of "he who inspects entrails" or a diviner
according to the root information, and one wonders if this
is something to do with the psyche rather than the stomach,
as if the harp and string connection is another clue.
~chorus-
a composition written in four or more parts written for a
large number of singers; a refrain in which an audience
joins a soloist in a song; a repeat of the opening statement
of a popular song played by the whole group; a solo section
based on the main melody of a popular song and played by a
member of a group; a body of singers who perform choral
compositions; a body of vocalist and dancers who support the
soloists and leading performers in operas, musical comedies,
and revues; speaking in unison; an actor in Elizabethan
drama who recites the prologue and epilogue to a play and
sometimes comments on the action; a group of masked dancers
who perform ceremonial songs around religious festivals in
early Greek times; an exposition of disengagement from song
or dance to commentary; a portion of a classical Greek drama
consisting of a choric dance and song; a group or performers
in a modern drama serving a purpose similar to the Greek
chorus; utterances made in concert or simultaneously; all
together in unison, Latin choral dance, from Greek khoros
The most obvious chorus among life
is that of the earth and sun, and their yearly dance, and
the fact that several other planets in the vicinity also
obey the composition. The first four planets seem hard wired
to our mythological history, even our psyche, while the
remaining five seem to weave in and out just to cause
trouble, or send emergency messages.
~cohort-
(evision); a group or band of
people who have their purpose aligned in analogy to that of
the coho salmon, who are
a fish, at one time in history who flourished, and were not
segregated into oblivion; market
research; company of solders; Middle English, from
Old French, cohorte, from Latin cohors,
cohort-, (notes: it
seems this word is likely associated with the salmon, and
was created on this basis, and has been used as a method of
military reference.)
~cortege-
a train of attendants, as of a distinguished person,
retinue; ceremonial procession; funeral procession, French
cortège, from Old Italian corteggop, from
corteggaire, to pay honor, from corte, court,
from Latin cohors, cohort-, throng
It seems in the cortex (root
sker-1-) of the brain,
you may also have the corse (root kwrep-), or corpse,
that which are like the walking dead. The cortex is similar
to the chorion in context, so the use of the throng in the
middle of this lex is quite strange.
~court-
the extent of space that is completely surrounded by walls,
buildings, or other debris; courtyard; an area or wide alley
enclosed on three sides; the perception of space within a
larger foyer; the impression of structure emulated from the
buildings themselves; where some considered dignities
reside flushed with excessive royalty; retinue of
sovereign's government; Law: the reference to a body
of people or body of people who are granted a task of
hearing and submit judgments based on the laws written by
people; a judicial assembly; ecclesiastical jurisdiction and
judgments upon others; Activities: an open area designed to
learn about the processes of weight and physics; basketball;
corporate controlling body; behavior in which the observer
is inviting interaction from the surrounding environment;
flattery; courtship, woo, Middle English, from Old French
cort, from Latin cohors, cohort-, courtyard, retinue
Just so you know, all that is based
on the retinue, which has no root, and really means
"retain", which does have a root, and that is ten-,
or low density, which is another group that is flagged for
reconstruction soon. Also, the court and yard mating ritual
seems mighty odd.
~courtesan-
the classification for a women considered under the guise of
prostitute or that of forced sex as a way to provide
sustenance, and these clients are usually of great wealth
who contribute to the corruption of the system, and their
ranks are meaningless, French courtisane, from Old
French, from Old Italian cortigiana, feminine of
cortigiano, courtier, from corte, court, from
Latin cohors, cohort-
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~garden-
earth; a plot of land where vegetables, fruits, herbs,
and trees grow all by themselves in the wild, and thrive when
homo sapiens interact with them in choral unison; botanical
garden; the classification of an open area where
refreshments are served; greenery; Middle English
gardin, from Old North French, from gart, of Germanic
origin
In Greek mythology, it is a group of nymphs
who together with a dragon watch over the garden of Hesperides,
or that of the west flora section, where golden apples grow.
Hesperus is also the planet Venus, of which sits nicely over the
geometric position above Mercury, and earth is below Mars. The
hesperidium is the same thing as an orange or tangerine, where
the pulp is divided into segmentation, and the chorion is that
of a leathery rind analogical to the skin of the homo sapient. I
am led to see this as a sign of a ad additional study of
division in psychologically, and that this has been ignored
possibly in relation to a narcissism, aggression, and a
perfectionism formation, similarly to NPA theory, or a very
closely associated posit of this nature of which will be
explored.
~garth- a
grassy quadrangle surrounded by cloisters; paddock, Middle
English, enclosed yard, from Old Norse gardhr
The cloister is the "shut place," one away
from the world, so it may be assumed that this garden is void, a
flat piece of concrete approaching the wall. The paddock is
sometimes considered a fenced area usually for horses to graze,
and from Old English pearroc. It is also with the root of the padishah
that is considered the "house master" and the root poti-
is navigated to page 842, and the word hemisphere*.
So, it looks like kindergarten is off to a great start. In
mathematics, the quadrangle has a minimum of four critical
points, of which three are never collinear.
~gird- a preparation for action; a form of
reactance: "Men
still spoke of peace but girded more sternly for war"
(W. Bruce Lincoln - AHD); a form of cohesion: gimlet; a process
of equipment for navigation; gimbal; the summoning up of one's
inner spirit into the matter; parsimony; to spare
There is a long trail attached to this
word, and of the two ghel- roots, the first being
very small, and the second a monster. The first is the
celandine, and the emerald connection to the greenery, and that
of the sparrow returning in spring, but it is also associated
with the Norse fire trail. The second ghel- is that of the
golden apples (the color yellow), and is in chapter 24.
ghel-2- countersunk (24)
~girdle- a
belt or sash worn around the waist; something that encircles
like a belt; elastic undergarments; to
strip a tree of its bark around its base to better accommodate
destruction; surround; removal of
the cambium in order to kill it, Middle English girdel,
from Old English gyrdel
The cambium is the lateral meristem in most
vascular plants that form parallel rows in secondary tissue for
support, from Medieval Latin, exchange, of Celtic origin. The
continued deforestation is completely unnecessary, especially in
the U.S. where millions of home are currently vacant.
~girth-
the distance around something; circumference; size or bulk load;
a strap encircling an animal's body in order to secure a saddle
or load in its back; cinch; Middle English gerth, strap,
from Old Horse gjördh, girdle
Both girt1 and girt2 are also associated
with gird, and girth. The root sāwel is also
nested on top of these words, and that of the gyrating
sunflower, which may be a reference to earth, or possibly the
moon encircling it, as if it were measuring the distance around
it. The root group lands of page 881 from words in the list such
as solstice, Sunday, Helium, and the
girasol, which may be analogical to the humdinger* title on
the page.
~hora- a
traditional round dance of Romania, Modern Hebrew hōrā,
from Romanian horā, from Turkish hora, perhaps
from Modern Greek khoro, accusative of khoros,
round dance, from Greek
~horticulture-
the science or art of growing and enhancing fruits, vegetables,
herbs, and trees in order to harvest seeds for replanting and
further inner cultivation, Latin hortus, garden + (AGRI)CULTURE
There have been at least two implanted
insinuations with misleading definitions, one in the garden
definition as a idiom meaningless slang
to deceive, and now, the word
hortative tagging
hortus, garden with the
meaning of to exhort, of
which both seem to be causing more confusion than any other
purpose. The root agro- includes the fast running
ass the onager and is explained in quadrangle form on
page 4 of the AHD.
~kindergarten1-
the classification for a program attached to an age group of 4-6
years of age where the implementation of preparation for the
school system immediately thereafter, German : Kinder,
genitive plural of Kind, child (from Middle High German
kint, from Old German kind, see genæ-) +
garden (from Middle High German garte, from Old High
German garto, see gher-1-)
It seems obvious that the lesson about
the true garden have been omitted, and that the garden is earth,
and as of today, this lesson has been pushed to the bottom of
the list.
~orchard- what is considered an area of land devoted to growing
of fruit and or nuts trees, Middle English, from Old English
orceard, alteration of ortgeard : perhaps wyrt,
wort, plant, see WORT1 + geard, yard, [ref:
wort- root wrād-, German wurzel,
root, radix, monitor*]
~ortolan-
( Emberiza hortulana ), Old World bunting, small
brownish bird similar to the bobolink and sora, French, from
Provencal, gardener, ortolan, from Latin hortulānus,
from hortulis, diminutive of hortus, garden
(bigoted remarks about eating this creature have been omitted)
~Terpsichore-
Greek Mythology: the Muse of dancing and choral singing;
the art of dancing, Latin Terpsichorē, from Greek
Terpsikhorē, from feminine of terpsikhoros,
dance-loving : terpein, to delight + khoros, dance
The word terpene is from the
obsolete turpentine, and it is also related to the trilogy of
nature, as in the tern, and also those terpolymers where three
distinct monomers exists. Unsaturated fats are capable of
dissolving more of a solute. Note that it is omega 3 not 6 that
is needed in the diet.
~yard- yard1: implanted use, a
consideration for a track of ground adjacent to, surrounding, or
surrounded by a building or group of buildings; track of ground
used for a specific business venture; an area where railroad
trains are made up and care are switched, stored, and serviced
on tracks and sidings; a winter pasture for deer or other
grazing animals; enclosed track of ground used for raising
animals such as chickens, are kept; gathered into the yard;
Middle English, from Old English geard, yard2:
no derivative, fundamental unit of length
adopted by both U.S. Customary System and British Imperial
System, equal to 3 feet, or 36 inches (0.9144 meter);
Nautical: a long tapered spar slung to a mast support and
spread the head of a square sail, lugsail, or lateen, Middle
English yerde, stick, unit of measure, from Old English
gerd
Of note for the group above, for
comparisons, check the root kent- which is also
classified as the girdle, but it seems more the dry dock*, or
the eccentric centrists, or those who constantly bounce off
themselves. This root will be placed with it's lex partners
(s)keu-. |
Part two:
Daphne
revised 2008NOV28
|

© R. Mark Sink |
10-banshee-gyne-gynecocracy-gyno-gynoceium-gynous-gyny-quean-queen
-zenana-et-gwen- woman,
Suffixed form *gwen-ā-, Old English-
cwene, quean, woman, wife, from Germanic
*kwenōn-, Old Irish- ben, banshee, woman,
Germanic- *kwenōn, Persian- zan, zenana,
woman; suffixed lengthened-grade form *gwen-i-,
Old English- cwēn, queen, woman, wife, Germanic- *kwēniz,
woman, wife, queen; Suffixed zero-grade form *gwn-ā-,
-GYNE, GYNO-, -GYNOUS, -GYNY; GYNECOCRACY, (GYNECOLOGY),
GYNOECIUM, Greek- gunē, woman, Daphne*, Yin*
[Pokorny guenā 473] |
~banshee-
a female spirit in Gaelic folklore believed to presage, by
wailing, (a death in the family), Irish Gaelic bean sidhe,
woman of the fairies, banshee : bean, woman (from Old
Irish ben, see gwen, +
sidhe, fairy, (from Old Irish side)
In looking closer at the word bean,
we find it is the genus Phaseolus, in the pea family,
having leaves with three leaflets, various colored flowers,
and edible pods and seeds, from Middle English ben,
broad bean, from Old English bēan, of the root
bha-bhā-, which is the lentil shaped object. Julius
Pokorny leaves page number 106, which may be the aruspex*,
a variant of the haruspex, root gheræ-, which
again is also the chorion.
~gyne-
suffix, female reproductive organ: trichogyne,
from Greek gunē, woman
~gynecocracy-
the perception of a government or society ruled by women,
Greek gunaikokratia : gunē, gunaik-,
woman; see gwen, + -kratia,
-cracy (note: this is
also analogical to nature and plant life where the
reproductive organs serve as the primary ruling party in
sexual transmissions.)
~gyno- or
gyn- prefix, woman: gynarchy; female
reproductive organ; pistil: gynophore, from Greek
gunē, woman
~gynoceium-
the female reproductive organs of a flower; the pistil or
pistils considered as a group, New Latin, alteration
(influenced by Greek oikos, house; see ECOLOGY) of
Latin gynaecēum, woman's apartments, from Greek
gunaikeion, from neuter of gunaikeios, of woman,
from gunē, gunaik-, woman
~gynous-
suffix, of, related to, or having a specified number
of women or females: heterognyous; of, related to, or
situated in a specified place with respect to female plants
organs: epigynous; having a specified number or kind
of female plant organs: protogynous, from New Latin
-gynus, from Greek gunē, woman
~gyny-
suffix, of, related to, or having a specified number of
women or females: monogny; of, related to, or
situated in a specified place with respect to female plants
organs: epigyny; having a specified number or kind of
female plant organs: protogyny, from from Greek
gunē, woman
~quean-
label for a woman considered disreputable, especially a
prostitute; Scots: a young woman, Middle English
quene, from Old English cwene, woman
~queen-
wife or widow of king; woman sovereign; a personification of
eminence or supremacy in a given domain of femininity;
Games: the most powerful chess piece able to move in any
direction in a straight line; raising a pawn to queen;
Biology: a fertile, fully developed female in a colony
of social bees, ants, or termites; a domineering confusion
often forced or enhanced upon masculinity; Middle English
quene, from Old English cwēn
~zenana-
the part of a house in southwest Asia reserved for the woman
of the household, Hindi zenāna, from Persian, from
zan, woman References:
-Zen Buddhism- Chinese and Japanese school of
Mahayana Buddhism that asserts that enlightenment can be
attained through meditation, self-contemplation, and
intuition rather than through faith and devotion
exclusively, Japanese zen, from Chinese (Mandarin)
chān, meditation. from Pali jhānam, from Sanskrit
dhyānam, from dhyāti, he mediates, see Zend:
The Zend-Avesta
-Zend-Avesta- the entire body of sacred writings of
the Zoroastrian religion, French, from Persian zandavastā,
from Avesta-va-zend, Avesta with an interpretation :
Middle Persian apastāk, text + Middle Persian zend,
interpretation The dictionary
omitted the word exclusively in defining Buddhism,
which was added to help clarify what they were trying to
say, but somehow, left it off the end. Obviously, some faith
is required to have intuition, as this is a separation of
the rational processes and implementation of reason, and
insight by which faith is bound, as these are impressions,
and the igniting of the inner emotions. Faith is often
segregated into its own label representing certain religious
practices and creating a vague reflection of
meaninglessness. Faith then is already nested in the midst,
and needs a better understanding of how it must be strongly
related to emotions. |
Part three: Mensa
|

© R. Mark Sink |
18-androceium-autoecious-diocese-dioecious-dioicous-ecesis-ecology
-ecomony1-ecumenical-heteroecious-monoecious-parish-vaisya-vicinity-villa
-village-villain-villanelle-et-weik-1-
clan, (social unit above the household) suffixed form *weik-slā,
VILLA, VILLIAGE, VILLIAN, VILLANELLE, (VILLEIN); (BIDONVILLE),
Latin- vīlla, country house, farm, Suffixed o-grade
form *woik-o-, (VICINAGE), VICINITY,
(BAILIWICK), Latin- vīcus, quarter of district of a
town, neighborhood; Greek oikos, house, and its
derivatives oikia, a dwelling, and oikēsis,
dwelling, administration; Zero-grade form *wik-,
Sanskrit visah, Vaisya, dwelling, house, mensa*, Yang*
[Pokorny ueik- 1131]
(ecomony2 -
nem-) |
|
~androceium- Botany: the stamens of a flower considered
as a group, New Latin : ANDR(O)- + Greek oikion,
diminutive of oikos, house
The
stamen is the pollen-producing reproductive organ of a
flower, usually consisting of a filament and an anther from
Latin stāmen, thread.
This is from the monstrously large root stā-,
which at this time is beginning to feel like Europa, and the
starboard white bull, but we'll see. Click image at right to
see a portable doc and diagram of the China rose Hibiscus
where the filament and style are of the same structure
including the pollen.
Also see these flowers at wiki especially if the page has not been fixed
yet.
Hibiscus rosa sinensis
~autoecious-
Botany: having all stages of a life cycle occurring
on the same host, from AUTO- + Greek oikos, house
~diocese-
Botany: the district (quarter?) or churches
(flowers?) under a jurisdiction (sun?) of a bishop;
bishopric, Middle English diocise, from Old French,
from Late Latin diocēsis,
from Latin dioecēsis, jurisdiction, from Greek
diokēsis, administration, from diokein, to keep
house, administer : dia-, intensive prefix; see DIA-
+ oikein, oikē-, to inhabit (from oikos,
house)
~dioecious-
Botany: having the male and female
reproductive organs borne on separate individuals of the
same species; marked by species in which the male and female
reproductive organs occur on different individuals; sexually
distinct, from New Latin Dioecia, form class name : DI-1 +
Greek oikia, a dwelling
~dioicous-
Botany: having sex organs on separate plants;
unisexual; used of mosses and related plants, from New Latin
dioecus : DI-1 + Greek oikos, house
References:
DI-1, root
dwo-
Bacchus: amino (18)
ōs-
Dione:
governor (24) deiw-
deadems (25)
~di-1
prefix, two, twice; double:
dichromatic; containing two atoms, radicals, or groups:
dichloride; di-2, variant of dia-,
prefix, through: diachronic; across:
diatropism, Greek, from dia, through
~oscillate-
swing back and forth, oscillum,
small mask of Bacchus, Greek Mythology: Bacchus, see
Dionysus, two-headed, and
~Dione-
Greek Mythology: the mother
of Aphrodite by Zeus; Astronomy: Satellite eleventh
in distance from Saturn; Greek Diōnē, from Dios,
genitive of Zeus; Dione B: satellite of Saturn
12th in distance
It was Cytherea that was the
god of love and beauty, called Aphrodite, who happens
to be polka partner to aphyllous which is a leafless
plant. It was also Nietzsche, in the philosophy of
Dionysion that postulated displaying a
creative-intuitive versus a critical-rational
power of thinking. One could easily say that Dionysus and
her orgy are rooted in the oscillation of earth itself, or
its wobble, and this has been expanded on over the
centuries.
~ecesis-
successful establishment of a plant or animal species in a
habitat, from Greek oikēsis,
inhabitation, from oikein, to dwell, from oikos,
house
Reference:
-eccrine- eccrine gland; exocrine, Greek ekkrinein,
to secrete : ek-, out, see ECTO- + krinein, to
separate, root krei-; riddle1, secret,
discern, critic, hypocrisy, intertribal*
-echard- soil water not available, Greek ekhein,
to hold back, root segh-; conquest in battle,
cathexis, entelechy, Ophiuchus, hexis, cessation, leisure,
school1; hyperbaric*
~ecology-
Bionomics: (French bionomique, pertaining to
ecology, from bionomie, ecology); the study of all
relationships between organisms and their environment; human
ecology; Euthenics: the study of the science of
environmental relationships and their inhabitation; flora
and fauna in balance, German
Ökologie : Greek oikos, house + German
-logie, study (from Greek -logia, -logy)
Most of the explanations provided for ecology don't
really explain anything, such as "reversal" or "modern
civilization", and the use of "detrimental effects" is
ancient history. It is impossible to reverse, there is only
repair, and civilization is currently at death wish mode.
The study of the house can also be seen as euthenics which
is tagged to the slang "better living" as though it was more
just a magazine, as our current world is not interested in
better, rather all life and privileges related to it.
Ecology and euthenics are really not that far apart, and it
may just the difference between analysis and evaluation.
~ecomony1- the thrift management of resources that
pertain to survival; the effects of such a system that
includes a monetary standard; the specifying of such a
system: "the sense that there is a moral economy in the
world, that good is rewarded and evil is punished" (George
F. Will - AHD); an organization of functions and parts
within a household; the processing of the monetary system
attached to the household; Middle English yconomye,
management of a household, from Latin oeconomia, from Greek
oikonomia, from oikonomos, one who manages a household :
oikos, house, see weik-1- + nemein, to allot, manage, see
nem-; Deuteronomy, spreading ulcer, wandering
in search of pasture, metronome, ghillie*
[ref: appraise, see per-5-
haunt (33)]
~ecumenical-
of worldwide scope or applicability; universal; concerned
with establishing unity within the flora and fauna
environment, Late Latin oecūmenicus,
from Greek oikoumenikos, from (hē) oikoumenē (gē),
(the) inhabited (world), feminine present passive participle
of oikein, to inhabit, from oikos, house
The references to religion have been
removed, as this is misleading. Also, the feminine reference
may have more to do with the fact that the stamens are
manifested from the gynoecium, and housed or inhabiting this
environment. The truth may be that the starboard spiritual
house has been robbed.
~heteroecious-
spending different stages of a life cycle on different,
usually unrelated hosts; used of parasites such as rust
fungi and tapeworms, from HETERO- + Greek oikia,
house + -ous
The prefix hetero- is with the sem-1- root and the
Hamadryad, which means one of two, other. The trail around
the sem- roots is thick, and the frog has appeared
with men-3-, and the creation of
the immanent carrier entity, so more work will be done
before December 8.
~monoecious-
Botany: having unisexual reproductive organs or
flowers, with the organs of flowers of both sexes borne on a
single plant, as in corn and pines; Zoology:
Hermaphroditic; New Latin Monoecia, class name :
MONO- + Greek oikia, dwelling
~parish-
a country subdivision similarly in Louisiana (counties)
separated for jurisdiction; British county; Roman Catholic
Church and State; Middle English, from Old French
parroche, from Late Latin parochia, diocese,
alteration of paroecia, from Late Greek paroikia,
from Greek, a sojourning, from paroilos, neighboring,
neighbor, sojourner : para-, near; see PARA-1 +
oikos, house
The word sojourn is from Vulgar Latin *subdiurnāre
: Latin sub-, sub- + Late Latin diurum, day
(from Latin, daily ration, from neuter of diurnus,
daily, from diēs, day, see root
deiw-
deadems (25)
and this includes Zeus, Deus, Tuesday, Jupiter, and Dione
which leaves the connotation that the worship is Gregorian
related to astrological symbology albeit veiled today in
dramatic biblical fantasy.
~Vaisya-
considered the third of four classes in Hindu, that of
farmers, herders, artisans, merchants, and businessmen,
Sanskrit vaisyah, settler, homesteader, from visah,
house, see Vaishnava: one who worships Vishnu
~vicinity-
a state of being near; proximity; nearby or
adjoining; neighborhood; approximation or degree as though a
neighbor; Latin vīcīnitās,
from vīcīnus,
neighboring, from vīcus, neighborhood
The Latin bāiulus is the
carrier, often known as the bailiff, as in the
bailiwick defined; Bailiff + wik, town. This
person is granted the duty of overseeing arrest warrants,
and other processes. Note the derivative reference to
quarters, as in division by four. There seems four bales in
definitions, and this is Latin bāiulāre, to carry a
load, from bāiulus, carrier of a burden, which is
rooted to bheug-, the bow, bog, and bight,
which is referenced to page 152, and the barrio*,
a urban district or quarter mostly Spanish.
~villa-
country home; middle-class suburb, Italian, from Latin vīlla,
(notes: references to
well-to-do person are removed
as this is propaganda, and the forcing of belief that having
a suitable country home with multiple occupants is not
acceptable in morally burdened states, while at the same
time promoting apartments and platonic living suitable to
the religiously altered states.)
~village-
a small clump or group of dwellings in a rural area, usually
ranking in size between a hamlet and a town; U.S.
incorporated zoning; a group of birds or animals habitats
suggesting a village, Middle English, from Old French, from
Latin vīllāticum,
farmstead, from neuter of vīllāticus,
of a villa or farmstead, from Latin vīlla, country
house, farm
~villain-
wicked or evil housemaster; scoundrel; fictional character
who is typically at odds with the hero; variant of
villein; something said to cause a particular trouble or
an evil, Middle English vilein, feudal serf, person
of coarse feelings, from Old French, from Vulgar Latin *vīllānus,
feudal serf, from Latin vīlla, country home
~villanelle-
a 19-line poem of fixed form consisting of five tercets and
a final quatrain on two rhymes, with the first and third
lines of the first tercet repeated alternatively as a
refrain closing the succeeding stanzas and joined as the
final couplet of the quatrain, French, from Italian
villanella, from feminine of villanello, rustic,
from villano, peasant, from Vulgar Latin *vīllānus,
from Latin villa, country house
The villi
is plural for villus
which is the classification for the minute shaggy hairs that
extend from the chorion in the development of the placenta
in mammals, and the epidermal outgrowths of plants.
Vim is
also close by rooted to
weiæ-
megapolis (28) |
Part four: Cohesion
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4-gamete-gamo-gamous-gamy-et-gemæ-
to marry, Suffixed zero-grade from *gmæ-o-, GAMETE, -GAMO-,
-GAMOUS, -GAMY, from Greek gamos, marriage,
cohesion* [Pokorny ĝem(e)- 369] |
~gamete-
a reproductive cell having the haploid number of
chromosomes, especially a mature sperm or egg capable of
fusing with a gamete of the opposite sex to produce the
fertilized egg, New Latin gameta, from Greek gametē,
wife, and gametēs, husband, from gamein, to
marry, from gamos, marriage
~gamo-
or gam- prefix, united; joined:
gamopetalous; sexual: gamogenesis, Greek,
marriage, from gamos
~gamous-
suffix, having a specified number of marriages:
monogamous; practicing a specific kind of marriage:
exogamous; having a specified kind of reproduction or
reproductive organs: heterogamous, from Greek -gamos,
from gamos, marriage
~gamy-
suffix, marriage: exogamy; procreative or
propagative union: allogany; the possession of a
specified manner of fertilization or specified reproductive
organs: apogamy; Greek -gamia, from gamos,
marriage
The masculine and feminine stigmas have been added only
as a guide, and are subjective. Cohesion occurs in Botany in
a congenital union of parts of the same kind, such as the
calyx of five united sepals. Cohesion is from Latin
cohaesus, past participle of cohaerēre,
to cling together, see cohere, which is considered the
aesthetically consistent whole basically because it seems to
resist separation. |
Part five: Conation
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3-ageratum-geriatrics-geronto-et-geræ-1-
to grow old, Suffixed lengthened-grade form *gēræ-s-,
Greek- gēras, old age, Suffixed form *geræ-ont-,
Greek- gerōn (stem geront-), old man,
conation* |
|
~ageratum- any of the various New World plants of
the genus Ageratum in the composite family,
especially ( A. houstonianum ) having showing,
colorful flower heads; any of several other plants having
flower clusters similar to the ageratum, New Latin Agēratum,
genus name, from Greek agēratos, ageless : a-, not;
see A-1 + gēras, old age
Of note, the only rooted words related
to age are, agendum and agent, root ag-,
which at this moment is still in chapter 11. The word age is
rooted to aiw-; ever, eternal, Actaeon*
~geriatrics-
of or related to practices whereby age is the main factor in
the study of medicine, and remedies are created related to
health, Greek gēras, old
age + iatrics, from Greek iatrikos, medical,
from iatros, physician, from iasthai, to heal
Greek Mythology: Iapetus
was a Titan who was the father of Prometheus and Atlas and
an ancestor to the human race, also the 16th satellite of
Saturn. Icarus was the son of Daedalus, who,
in escaping from Crete on artificial wings flew too close to
the sun and the wax with which his wings were fastened
melted, and he fell into the Aegean Sea. The Geryon
was a monster with three bodies that was slain by Hercules.
I wonder if Geryon and the three gorgons are related.
~geronto-
or geront- prefix, old age; aged one: gerontology,
French geronto-, from Greek geronta-, from
gerōn
It was Geronimo (1829-1909) who was
already close to 50 years of age, that served as an Apache leader and
resisted the U.S. government policy to consolidate his
people in reservations by leading a series of raids against
Mexican and American settlements in the Southwest between
1876 and 1886.
Conation: Psychology: mental processes or
behavior directed toward action or change and including:
impulse, desire, volition, and striving, from Latin cōnārī,
to try |
Part six: Imputer
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5-conserve-hero-observe-preserve-reserve-et-ser-1-
to protect, Extended form *serw-, (RESERVOIR), Latin-
servāre, to keep,
preserve, Perhaps suffixed lengthened-grade form *sēr-ōs-,
Greek- hērōs, "protector", imputer* [Pokorny 2.
ser-
910] |
~conserve- to protect from loss or harm;
preserve: calls to preserve our heritage at ground level
reality; to use carefully or sparingly, avoiding waste:
citizens conserved while industry's overbearing effect
nullified the illusion; to keep a (quantity) constant
through physical or chemical reactions or evolutionary
changes: the imputed psyche was preserved; preservation of
(fruits) with sugars; economize: paying for gas truly was
taking sugar from the fruit; Middle English conserven,
from Old French conserver, from Latin cōnservāre
: com-, intensive prefix; see COM- (together) + servāre,
to preserveWith conservation,
with have many serious problems, and one is
price rigging, where the cost
of daily goods exceeds the sustainability of the consumer,
and with this permanent inflationary effect, it is like a
death wish to the essence of fruition. It seems this helps
to hide the fact that everything else has been overproduced
(we have so much junk now, there is no place for it), and
the status quo want to keep this in effect in a sort of
dream world, and they play off each other. The creation of a
world in need attached to the fixing is now just a disease.
Goods continuously cost more, but the reality is, they are
not really worth more, as this is abstract, and this midst
is where the beasts live.
◊~hero-
in mythology and legend, a man, often of divine ancestry,
who is endowed with great courage and strength, celebrated
for his bold exploits, and favored by the gods; a person
noted for feats of courage or nobility of purpose,
especially one who has risked or sacrificed his life for a
worthy cause: he died a hero defending the constitution
from thieves; a person noted for a special achievement
in a particular field: the heroes of history;
celebrity; the principal male character in a novel, poem, or
dramatic presentation; see heroine- principal female
character; see submarine (sense 2) probably alteration of
Latin hērōs, from Greek
It is true that humans can eat like
dogs, food is even made so that you get the effect. In Greek
mythology, the Hero was a priestess of Aphrodite
beloved by Leander, and the first century A.D. Heron Hero
was the Alexandrian scientists who devised a formula for
determining the area of a triangle. And, Herod, who
also comes out of the midst in time, was claimed to have
ordered children under 2 murdered in order to rid himself of
baby Jesus. It was Herod Antipas (who married his own
niece Herodias) who is claimed to have also been one
place where the grown Jesus was sent for judgment. The
Heron is also the Great egret ( Casmerodius albus
). There are other sea birds, and herring gull is the common
seagull, although, one is called red herring, and it is
something that draws attention away from the central issue.
Reference:
-Hermes- Greek Mythology: god of commerce,
invention, cunning, and theft, who also served as messenger,
scribe, and herald for the other gods; see Hermes
Trismegistus; Egyptian god of Thoth Alamagest, (TRISOCTAHEDRON)
root meg-
~observe- a process of social and spiritual
awareness; watch; the illation of conscious deduction:
observed the sky move across in panorama; a perception
not yet inferred: observed the days locked to the
calendar; a perception of being without presence:
conformity; Middle English observen, to conform to,
from Old French observer, from Latin observāre,
to abide by, watch : ob-, over, see OB- (turn toward) +
servāre, to keep, watch, Synonyms: keep, see,
celebrate, commemorate, solemnize
To keep watch is not to keep watching TV, as this is
complete nonsense, and when white space hits, TV will
hopefully be history. Nevertheless, to turn toward
keeping watch is a conformity to awareness, not
brainwashing. It is impossible to observe a holiday, because
it is only a day of the week, so they tell you to watch
days, similar to the way some religions worship days, or
diēs, and you are in fact
encouraged to worship the astrological upbringings of
ancient and weird practices to instill commerce for theft.
~preserve-
to maintain in safety from injury, peril, or harm; protect;
to keep in good or unaltered condition; conservation; to
keep or maintain intact: tried to preserve family harmony;
defend; preparation in relation to sustenance (canning,
salting, dehydrating); prevention of decay;
a process of creating an environment
whereby nature is plentifully expressed; wildlife
restriction; exclusive provinces; Middle English
preserven, from Old French preserver, from Medieval
Latin praeservāre, from
Late Latin, to observe beforehand : Latin prae-, pre-
+ Latin servāre, to guard, preserve
Nature preserves and zoos are just
man's feeble attempt to impress himself, and doing a
brilliantly stupid job of it, as the truth is that humans
for the most part consider the planet and the life upon it,
its prey.
~reserve-
to keep back (providing fruition); book; to secure
for personal use; retain; a reservation in thoughts,
feelings, observations, and/or affairs;
reticence; silent nights;
exploitation of life; exploitation of resources;
exploitation of knowledge, exploitation of land; a
defensive posture overseen as ready to defend only if needed
as the main force of any aggressiveness; keep back; set
aside or saved; Middle English reserven, from Old
French reserver, from Latin reservāre,
to keep back : re-, re- + servāre, to keep
Lex: It was Michael Servetus (originally
Miguel Serveto) who was executed at age 42 for beliefs
related to Trinity that were a mandatory religious doctrine
of the time. He was a
physician who described the circulation of blood
(1511-1553). The serval is a long-legged
wildcat ( Felis serval ) of Africa, having a tawny coat with
black spots, from French, from Portuguese (lobo) cerval,
deerlike (wolf), lynx, from Late Latin cervālis, from
Latin cervus, deer. The serval is part of the
ker-1-
root, and surrounds the word serve, of which has no root.
The ker-1- root contains the
Capricorn, unicorn1, the reindeer, and the carrot, inclusive
of the cerebrum. It's Pokorny is 1. ker- 574, dwarf
star** This is the same as our sun.
The imputer also has a root
group called peu- where the hatching* lives,
and the removing of the notices of shade, a pit where
thought resides and reflection merge. Here the attributions
begin, and the truer impunities emerge. It is different than
the computer which is (together) versus (into,
within). |
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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