| |
"Too much money
destroys as surely as too little." (John Simon
- AHD)
Chapter 56: Shaken and the Crystal Diamond
January 30, 2009:
In another episode, the Legman may have seen me
coming, as on the 23rd, (last chapter, on Friday), I
carelessly walked into a chair and nearly broke my little
toe, as it swelled, and I even puked (hot-flash to
cold-flash). It was a lucky Friday,
as this gave me a couple of days of leg-free time to recoup,
before getting back on my feet, and attempting to walk and
stand. Almost all the swelling is now gone, and getting back
to normal.
We seem to live in a world of subsidiary propositions
assumed to be valid, plain and simple, an argument to
continue living, and our body cooperates. Our enate, almost
inured desires run amuck rapidly leaving the lonely
streetlight as a beacon. Reaching back for a moment, and for
a bearing for the reader, this phase of the work began on
the first day of February, almost exactly a year ago. At the
current pace, two years remain estimated to complete the root
organization, of which will be modified into other uses, but
remain online if possible. An attempt to gather root groups
that pertained to the Zodiac wheel was primarily used during
that period, and to pick up clues about others along the
way.
It
would be best to describe the remaining work as referencing
the geometric arrangement versus the Gregorian mix and match
system. I will also focus on the "setting of stones" that
were revealed in the text of Exodus and Revelation, in
combination, and to follow their relationships that have
been developed to attempt to learn more. To continue on with
the stone journey, the sign of the Aquarius is a fixed
sign, one of three belonging to air, and
three other cardinal groups belong to each, water, earth,
and fire, all now having been correlated from
the navigator one. The resulting masculine influence that
rested on top can to some extent, be ignored, and better to have a feminine
aspect upper right, and lower left; masculine lower right,
and upper
left, where we are now, and heading south into Pisces. If
you noticed, the pathos overlaying the diagram repeats the
letter N three times in precession during a zodiac
year. The letter is reversed, but the diagram is also
reversed in layout, and often each side blends across to the
other, especially after last chapter's experience, and this
one to help a bit with this thinking. One can also begin to
see how each side is played upon the other, as the sea meets
the shore, and the carburetors above (air meets fire), and so
on.
|
Masculine Position - Air
A Black Horse carrying
scales for measuring

Libra
9/23-10/23
Cardinal
Masculine
Venus,2 |

Gemini
5/22-6/21
Mutable
Masculine
Mercury,1 |

Aquarius
1/21-2/18
Fixed
Masculine
Uranus,7 |
|
|
The jump in navigation that occurs ending at
earth on three occasions, does align strangely with the
analemma, or the equation of time referenced
previously. The first jump occurs just after turning the
bend on the larger of two loops, and the other two occur at
each crossing, (4/21, and 8/21). The first jump, around
1/20, also acquires a bump every four years, that being leap
year. If one overlays the actual analemma onto the diagram,
the right side is fat, and the left is skinny, however, the
seasons do align when this is done, although our journey
through time differs based on the stigmatized relationships
built not only within the dictionary itself, but it seems,
The Bible, and many others.
On
the left is a diagram that shows the "house of the water"
resting above the sea below, and the symbol for the planet
Uranus is the symbol for the Pisces sign below, with a
strange ball hanging down the center. (see right)
It does seem the "Ram" section, as referencing
William Delany in his five stigmas, are aligned properly, and
adamantly. (see comments in
wes-pero-
moor (44)) It is the adjacent upper section, or "fire of
Israel" that is causing more problems it seems, and a
complete absence of necessary emotions, although knowledge
is also being ignored routinely, and the act of learning
overall. |
In continuing on, it might be said that we sit in the fall of
winter, which ends in about 50 days. Midwest Florida will
supposedly reach
32 degrees Fahrenheit (approximately 28°
latitude) for the third time tonight.
Diamond-
mutable- extremely hard, highly refractive
crystalline form of carbon that is usually colorless
used as gemstone, abrasives, cutting tools, and other
applications; a figure with four equal sides forming two
inner obtuse angles and two inner acute angles; rhombus
or lozenge; red lozenge-shaped figure on certain playing
cards; Baseball: an infield, Middle
English diamaunt, from Old French diamant,
from Medieval Latin diamas, diamant-,
alteration of Latin adamas, see ADAMANT, see root
demę-; to break in horses, Mt.
Blanc*; carbon: ker-3-; lord's tower*
Part one:
Mont Blanc
|
 |
4-adamant-daunt-indomitable-tame-et-demę-
to constrain, force, especially to break in (horses),
Suffixed o-grade form *dom(ę)-o-, Old English-
tam,
tame, domesticated, Germanic- *tamaz; O-grade
form *domę-, DAUNT, INDOMITABLE, Latin- domāre,
to tame, subdue; Zero-grade form *dmę, ADAMANT,
(DIAMOND), Greek- daman, to tame (> adamas,
unconquerable, from *n-dmę-nt-) [Pokorny (demę-),
domę- 199] mont blanc* |
~adamant-
impervious to pleas, appeals, or reason, stubbornly
unyielding; inflexible; a stone once believed to be
impenetrable in its hardness; an extremely hard substance,
from Middle English, a hard precious stone, from Old French
adamaunt, from Latin adamās,
adamant-, hard steel, diamond, anything inflexible, from
Greek adamas, adamant-, hard steel, diamond, anything
fixed or considered unalterable, unconquerable, [ref:
Adam's peak- in south-central Sri Lanka, sacred to
Buddhists, Hindus, and Moslems]
In the word history of a neighboring
word adder, [the biblical injunction to be wise as
serpents and innocent as doves looks somewhat alien in the
Middle English guise. "Loke ye be prudent as neddris and
symple as dowves." Neddris, which is perhaps the
strangest-looking word in this Middle English passage, would
be adders in Modern English, with a different meaning
and form], no longer referring to just any snake or serpent.
Adder is said to illustrate a process known as "false
splitting", or juncture loss. If one begins to place Adam in
its navigated section, a feeling of passage concerns
are seemingly evident.
~daunt-
implanted use; to
abate the courage of;
discourage; dismay, Middle English daunten, from Old
French danter, from Latin domitāre,
frequentative of domāre, to
tame
The title of duaphin, a
seemingly take-off from dolphin means "title of the
lords of Dauphiné", and this is analogical to the jumping
dolphin, or that of possibly Daphne, or the first davit of
perception as portrayed in daub, meaning "whitewash".
See root albho-; ghostly apparitions,
oberon, elf, afghan hound*
~indomitable-
incapable of being overcome, subdued, or vanquished;
unconquerable, Late Latin indomitābilis
: Latin in-, not; see IN-1 + Latin domitāre,
to tame, frequentative of domāre, to subdue, [ref:
indo-, Greek from Indos, the Indus River, see
INDIGO, and indigo bunting- ( Passerina cyanea-
finch, deep blue plumage; indigo squill, see eastern
camass, also called wild hyacinth]
~tame-
possibly implant,
brought from wildness into domesticated or tractable state;
naturally unafraid; not timid: "The sea otter is
gentle and relatively tame." (Peter Mathiessen -
AHD); submissive; docile; fawning: tame obedience;
insipid; flat: a tame morning; sluggish; languid;
inactive: a tame war,
Middle English, from Old English tam
This group portrayed Mt. Blanc, although the last two
were rearranged from what may have been perceived in the
nave, and what seems to be portrayed by Pokorny. In breaking
in the horses, a blanket was often used to keep the animal
warm as an unbleached soft cloth. The coloring then
begins to spread upward out of the spirit of relationship.
See root
bhel-1- atomize*, authentic*, B
cell* |
Part two:
Lord's tower
|
 |
6-carbon-carbuncle-ceramic-crash-cremate-hearth-et-ker-3-
heat, fire, Suffixed form *ker-tā, Old English-
heorth, hearth, Germanic- *herthō;
Zero-grade form *kr-, CARBON, CARBUNCLE, Latin-
carbō, charcoal, ember; extended form *krem-,
Latin- cremāre, cremate, to burn; Possibly
suffixed and extended form *kerę-mo, Greek-
keramos, ceramic, potter's clay, earthenware;
Possibly variant extended form *krās-, Russian-
krasit', crash2, to
color [Pokorny 3. ker(ę)- 571] lord's tower* |
|
~carbon-
Atomic Element #6; Symbol C, naturally
occurring abundant nonmetallic element that occurs in
many inorganic and in all organic compounds, exists freely
as graphite and diamond and as a constituent of coal,
limestone, and petroleum, and is capable of chemical
self-bonding to form an enormous number of chemically
biologically, and commercially important molecules: carbon
paper; Electricity: either of two rods through which current
flows to form an arc, as lightning or welding; a
carbonaceous electrode in an electric cell, French
carbone, from Latin carbō, carbōn-, a
coal, charcoal Coal is
created by earth as amorphous carbon, or that of a substance
that is classified as having no shape, while also
having the tendency to burn, or that of amorous love, yet
this may be understanding the journey, and lived as the
second El Dorado as that in the second carbonado,
or that of the black diamond. This may be as a blade, and a
process of strengthening metal to resist burnishing, as in
diamond coated rotary wheels, and drill bits that penetrate
the hardest substances.
~carbuncle-
a painful localized bacterial infection of the skin and
subcutaneous tissue that usually has several openings
through which pus is discharged; a deep-red garnet,
unfaceted and convex (see wegh-
carried or drawn together, to a point); a red
precious stone, Middle English, from Old French, from
Latin carbinculus, small glowing ember, carbuncle,
diminutive of carbō, carbōn-,
coal
Aries serves as the cardinal
position of power for the fire center, and the
carburetor is a device that allows fire and air
to combine into an explosive mixture. Envy would be more
than happy to assist in this department. According to
some of the hermeneutic interpretation from Exodus 28,
of The Bible, the carbuncle is the 6th stone of twelve,
one of the twelve astrological signs, and the marker for
the beginning of the Zodiac wheel. The text in the
wegh- root also signifies the Taurus Bull
symbology.
~ceramic-
any of the various hard, brittle, heat-resistant and
corrosion-resistant materials made by shaping and then
firing a nonmetallic mineral, such as clay, at a high
temperature; an object, such as earthenware, porcelain
(see porko-; aardvark2,
porpoise, pig, helpmeet*), or tile (see (s)teg-
laodicean*); made of ceramic; fired-clay; from
Greek keramikos, of pottery, from keramos,
potter's clay
It seems that possibly in her
spinning wheel that even the slightest calm is removed,
almost a sense of aversion to those who understand the
power of emotions. The association with tile, and
the "open door" passages referenced in Revelation,
Chapter Three seems a clear message about those who have
succumbed to the old obelisk and will be interpreted in
the other writings. Of note, the referenced Pokorny's
for ceramic, especially the helpmeet reference, may be
associated with the story in Genesis, and the snake can
be associated with the cerastes, a viper with
horned-shaped projections referred to as a horned
serpent. See root
ker-1-
dwarf star (53)
~crash-
crash2: a coarse, light,
unevenly woven fabric of cotton or linen, such as a
towel, or curtain; a starched reinforced fabric used to
strengthen a book binding or the spine of a bound book,
from Russian krashenina, colored linen, from
krashenie, coloring, from krasit', to
color; crash1:
implant, no derivative, tag for the fire
center in various states, Middle English crasschen
: probably? akin to crasen, to shatter, see
CRAZE, [ref: Richard Crashaw (1613?-1649)
religious poet, Steps to the Temple, 1649]
~cremate-
transitive verb; incineration of human or animal
remains, Latin cremāre, cremāt-
~hearth-
the floor area of a furnace or fireplace, sometimes
extended into a space with brick, flagstone, or cement;
Metallurgy: the lowest part of a blast furnace or
cupola, from which molten metal flows; the bottom of a
reverberatory furnace, where one is exposed to the
flame; the fireplace or brazier of a blacksmith's forge,
Middle English herth, from Old English heorth
The dictionary did list "family
life" as a definition for hearth, but this is heart,
not hearth, unless you would want your family to burn,
which seems possibly the misconceptions around the
interpretation and its propagation, as in hearth
money, or Peter's pence, which was a tax paid to a
church which has taken and used this power position.
This also may jump across the base of the chalcedony,
hiding the heart of the spirit with wild ginger creating
a new hearth called health. It is seemingly true that
emotions are a hearth of fire, and the source of envy. |
Part three: Lazarus
17-cholesterol-redstart-starch-stare-stark-start-startle-starve-stere-stereo
-sterigma-stern1-stork-strut-torpedo-torpid-torpor-et-ster-1-
stiff, O-grade from *stor-, Suffixed form *stor-ē-,
Old English- starian, stare,
to stare, Germanic- *staren;
Extended form *stor-g-, Old English-
stearc,
stark, hard, severe, Germanic- *starkaz; Old
English- *stercan, starch, to stiffen,
Germanic denominative- *starkjan; Full-grade form
*ster-, Old English- *stierne, styrne,
stern, firm, Germanic- *sternjaz; Suffixed form
*ster-ewo-, STERE, STEREO-; CHOLESTEROL, Greek-
steros, solid; Lengthened-grade form *stēr-,
Greek- stērizein, sterigma, to support;
Zero-grade form *str-, Extended form *strg-,
Old English- storc, stork (probably from the
stiff movements of the bird), from Germanic *sturkaz;
Old English- strūtian, strut, to stand out
stiffly, Germanic- *strūt-; Extended form *sterd-,
Old English- steort, redstart, tail, Germanic-
*stertaz; [ Old English- *styrtan, start,
to leap up (< "move briskly, move stiffly"); Old English-
steartlian, startle, to kick, struggle, both
sourced Germanic *stert ]; Extended form *sterbh-,
Old English-
steorfan, starve, to die (< "become rigid"),
Germanic- *sterban; Extended form *(s)terp-
in suffixed (stative) zero-grade form *trp-ē-,
TORPEDO, TORPID, TORPOR, Latin- torpēre, to be stiff
[Pokorny 1. (s)ter- 1022] lazarus* (stern2
- stā-) |
|
~cholesterol-
a white, crystalline substance C27H45OH, found in animal
tissues, that is normally synthesized by the liver and is
claimed to be an important constituent of cell membranes
becoming a precursor to steroid hormones. It is also claimed
that the recorded level of this substance as measured by the
bloodstream can influence the pathogenesis of certain
conditions, CHOLE- (bile, see
ghel-2- countersunk (24))
+ Greek steros, solid + -OL1 (alcohol or phenol) (so
called because it was first found in gallstones)
This substance that is also claimed to
be something that is measured for health seems predominantly
associated with the dead body (cremated to taste), and those
who eat dead bodies, that of cattle, chickens, dogs, birds,
and many other dead bodies that are enriched with the naked
blood flesh.
~redstart-
a small North American bird ( Setophaga ruticilla ),
the male of which has black plumage with orange patches on
the wings and tails; European bird (Phoenicurus
Phoenicurus ) having grayish plumage and a rust-red
breast and tail, RED (see reudh- ruddy,
mountain ash, sand viper*) + obsolete start, tail
(from Middle English stert, from Old English
steort
The real sand viper is the
reader, from Old English rēad, red. There may also
exist a mist between the choleric state (bile, tagged to
anger above) and the sanguine states (passionate, confident,
optimistic) of humors adding confusion as to which is which
in the road ahead.
~starch- a naturally abundant
carbohydrate (C6H10O5)n, found chiefly in the seeds, fruits,
tubers, roots, and stem pith of plants, notably in potatoes,
rice, wheat, and corn, and varying widely in appearance
according to source but commonly prepared as a white,
amorphous, tasteless powder; any of the various substances,
such as natural starch, used to stiffen cloth; Middle
English starche, substance used to stiffen cloth
(sense uncertain), from sterchen, to stiffen, from
Old English *stercan
If you have your pith helmet
on, you'd know that pith is to plant, as pitch is to wood,
and enough pitch becomes sap oozing out, as in pitch pine.
Once inside your body, Fiber is constituted primarily
of polysaccharides such as cellulose that stimulates
intestinal peristalsis headed for the cecum.
~stare-
to look upon attentively and/or consistently; gaze;
to look upon directly; fixed gaze; to look upon
fixedly for obvious reasons; to express emotional content
inclusive of facial view that seems unnecessary or forceful:
the dilemma was in plain view starring her in the face;
Questionable entries: obvious
though initially overlooked; imminent or unavoidable, Middle
English staren, from Old English starian, also
see synonyms of gaze: gape, glare, peer, ogle
~stark-
bare; blunt: "His language has become increasingly
stark, to the point of sounding strident." (Robert
Pear - AHD); complete or utter; extreme; the karma
generated was stark; harsh; severe: the past showed
the stark nature of pathocracy; entirely; complete:
stark raving mad, Middle English, stiff, severe, strong,
from Old English stearc,
[ref: strident- loud,
discordant]
~start-
to mark the beginning of a session of activity or study;
commence (see sudden;
ei-
the joker (14));
to move suddenly or involuntarily; begin; a moment
that comes into view or realization; (see art, root ar- cosmic compass
(17));
a signal that denotes a beginning: spring planting begins
with nurtured starts; movement that designates
displacement, reaction, or loosening; an introduction or
development; proem; pathology that demonstrates using
position in time to utilize power over others that is often
abusive; (see experience, root
per-3-
hammerlock (33));
Middle English sterten, to move or leap suddenly,
from Old English- *styrtan, start,
to leap up (< "move briskly, move stiffly")
~startle-
to cause to make a quick involuntary movement or start; to
alarm, or surprise suddenly; frighten; mild shock, Middle
English stertlen, to run about, from Old English
steartlian, to kick; (see livid,
root
slī-
jayhawk (55)
)
~starve-
a form of deprivation instituted through the monetary
capitalists system affecting anyone who is not privy to
having access to nourishment created by mother earth;
prolonged lack of sustenance such as food and water,
medicinal needs, and humanitarian dignity, Middle English
sterven, to die, from Old English steorfan
~stere-
a unit of volume equal to one cubic meter, French stčre,
from Greek steros, solid, hard
~stereo-
stereo1: stereo-, prefix,
solid; solid body: sterotropism; three-dimensional:
steroscope; Greek, from stereos, solid;
stereo2: no derivative, noun- a
stereophonic sound-reproduction system; stereophonic sound;
stereotype; stereoscopic system or photograph
Reference polka partner:
-stereobate- Architecture: top course, solid +
walker, see root
gwā-
stepping tread;
cut and dried*, see sugar cane, small reed
~sterigma-
a slender projection of the basidium of some fungi that
bears a basidio-spore, New Latin, from Greek stērigma,
support, from stērizein, stērig-, to support,
[ref: steric- Physics/Chemistry: of or
related to the spatial arrangement of atoms in a molecule, [STER(EO)-
+ IC]]
~stern1-
hard, harsh, or severe in manner or character: a stern
demeanor; a foreboding appearance; unyielding or
uncompromising; inexorable; relentless: the wave looked
sternly headed for shore; Middle English sterne,
from Old English styrne, see root ster-1-;
stern2- Nautical: the rear part of
a ship or boat; a rear part or section; Middle English
sterne, perhaps of Scandinavian origin; akin to Old
Norse stjōrn, rudder, see root stā-;
starboard, larger domestic animal, lablab*
~stork-
any of the various large wading birds of the family
Ciconiidae, chiefly of the Eastern Hemisphere, having long
legs and a long straight bill, Middle English, from Old
English- storc, stork (probably from the
stiff movements of the bird), from Germanic *sturkaz
~strut-
the perception of a walk or appearance that portrays a
pompous bearing; swagger; to display in order to impress
others: she strutted with all her paid-for clothing;
a pompous self-important gait; ostentatious, Middle English
strouten, to stand out, from Old English strūtian,
to stand out stiffly; Synonyms: swagger, swank
~torpedo-
see electric ray; any of the various tropical or
subtropical marine fishes of the family Torpedinidaw,
having a rounded body and a pair of organs capable of
producing an electric discharge, which is used to stun or
kill prey, also called crampfish, numbfish, torpedo;
a mechanical device that is propelling beneath the surface
by another vessel designed to seek and destroy ships by
detonating upon contact; a small fireworks consisting of
some gravel wrapped in tissue paper with a percussion cap
that explodes when thrown against a hard surface; to destroy
or stun; Latin torpēdō, numbness, electric ray,
crampfish, from torpēre, to be stiff
~torpid-
deprived of the power of feeling; benumbed; dormant;
hibernating; lethargic;
apathetic (apathy, grief, to
suffer, pathos, emotion; see root
kwent(h)-
exfoliate*;
inactive, Latin torpidus, from torpēre, to be
stiff
~torpor-
a state of mental or physical inactivity or insensibility;
lethargy;
apathy; dormant, inactive state of a hibernating or
estivating animal, Latin, from torpēre, to be stiff
Lethargy may be a bit off base,
as this is associated with forgetfulness in its
construction, which would not necessarily apply to
hibernation. Lethargy also seems to be a possibly implanted
word or make-up from the sound of lethal, which
actually represents death. In mythology, Leto is also
nearby in the lex, with Lethe, the river of
forgetfulness, one of the five rivers of Hades.
The trail around apathy is
curious, as the feelings to care about the things that
really matter are slowly peeled away from the individual
through mass hyper-marketing which averts the necessary
grief pathos. It is one thing to be worn out or tired,
another to be numb psychologically, another to be absent
necessary emotions that provide true bearing. In that case,
a dormancy may have little or nothing to do with apathy
depending on the circumstances.
John 11: 9-10
King James
Jesus answered, Are there not twelve hours in the day? If
any man walk in the day, he stumbleth not, because he seeth
the light of this world. But if a man walk in the night, he
stumbleth, because there is no light in him.
In the story of Lazarus, which
Julius Pokorny may have led to, the passage noted seemed
pertinent, as a man without emotion is said to stumble, and
one who creates their own version of knowledge that
manifests the lethal results. |
Part four: Legman
23-bremsstrahlung-consternate-construct-destroy-industry-instruct-obstruct
-perestroika2-prostrate-sternum-strain2-stratagem1-strath-stratocracy-stratus
-straw-street-streusel-strew-stroma-structure-substratum-substruction-et-ster-2-
to spread, Extended form *streu-, Old English-
strēon, strain2, something
gained, offspring, Germanic suffixed form- *streu-nam-;
STRUCTURE, CONSTRUCT, DESTROY, INSTRUCT, OBSTRUCT,
SUBSTRUCTION, Latin- struere, to pile up, construct;
Zero-grade form *stru-, Latin- industrius,
industry, diligent, Old Latin- indostruus (endo-,
within; see en); Old High German- strāla,
bremsstrahlung, arrow,
lightning bolt, Germanic- *strēlō; O-grade
extended form *strou-, Suffixed form *strou-eyo-,
[ Old English- strē(o)wian, strew, to strew;
Old High German strouwen, strowwen, streusel,
to sprinkle, strew, both sourced *strawjan ];
Suffixed form *strow-o-, Old English- strēaw,
straw, Germanic- *strawam, "that which is
scattered," O-grade extended form *stroi-, Old
Russian- strojĭ, perestroika, order; Basic
forms *ster-, *sterę-, Nasalized form *ster-n-ę-,
STRATUS, STREET, CONSTERNATE,
PROSTRATE, SUBSTRATUM, Latin- sternere (past
participle strātus from zero-grade *strę-to-),
to stretch, extend; Suffixed
form *ster-no-, Greek- sternon, sternum,
breast, breastbone; Zero-grade from *str-, *strę,
Suffixed form *str-to-, STRATAGEM; STRATOCRACY,
Greek- stratos, multitude, army, expedition; Suffixed
form *strę-to-, Old Irish- srath, strath,
a wide river valley, Celtic- *s(t)rato-; Suffixed
extended form *strę-mn, STROMA; (STROMATOLITE),
Greek- strōma, mattress, bed [Pokorny 5. ster-
1029] legman*, lemmata* (perestroika1
- per-1-) (strain1 -
streig-) (stratagem2 - ag-) |
|
~bremsstrahlung-
the electromagnetic radiation produced by an accelerated
electrically charged subatomic particle, such as an
electron, as when it is deflected by another charged
particle, German : Bremse, brake (from Middle Low
German premse, from pramen, to press) +
Strahlung, radiation (from Strahl, ray, from
Middle High German strāle, from Old High German
strāla, stripe, piece
~consternate-
implanted use; to cause
consternation in perpetration of fear; intended paralysis in
an expected reaction, Latin cōnsternāre, cōnsternāt-
: com-, intensive prefix; see com- (together,
root kom-; contrary, entablature*) +
sternere, to throw down
Both of these above have
contradictions, and confusion between stripes, lightning
bolts, extensions, and falling or throwing down. The noun
consternation has no root info, and the transitive verb
creation is attached to it as a basis for its creation which
seems specifically for use with fear.
~construct-
to form by assembling or combining parts; build; to inlay a
strategy within an argument or sentence; Mathematics:
to draw (a geometric figure) that meets specific
requirements, usually with instruments limited to a
straightedge and compass; the process of imagination in
concept, modeling, or stratagem (craftsman plus
maker; see artifice, root
dhē-
three fates (12))
that portrays a schematic ideology: a theoretical
construct of the atom; to formulate an plan or idea:
"[He] began to shift focus from the haunted constructs of
terror in his early work." (Stephen Koch - AHD),
Latin cōnstuere, cōnstrūct- : com-, com- +
struere, to pile up
~destroy-
to ruin completely; spoil: the pertinent documents were
destroyed; a process of tearing down; demolish; ruin; to
do away with; put an end to: the terrorists destroyed the
trapped prey; to render useless or ineffective: the
bombing destroyed the livelihood of their neighbors; to
be destructive; cause destruction: "Too much money
destroys as surely as too little." (John Simon -
AHD), Middle English destroien, Latin dēstruere
: dē, de- (apart, away, see root de-,
tsimmes1, bias*) + struere, to pile
up
~industry-
energetic devotion to a task or an endeavor; diligence:
the pair shot their way into an industry; a branch of
a tree; manufacturer; see business; a niche or sector
that produces economical benefit; trade; an ongoing
endeavor of study associated with a specific era:
Industrial Revolution; Middle English industrie,
skill, from Old French, from Latin industria,
diligence, from feminine of industrius, diligent;
Word History: "A clear indication of the way in which
human effort has been harnessed as a force for the
commercial production of goods and services is the change in
meaning of the word industry. Coming from the Latin word
industria, meaning "diligent activity directed to some
purpose," and its descendant, Old French industrie,
with the senses "activity," "ability," and "a trade or
occupation," our word (first recorded in 1475) originally
meant "skill," "a device," and "diligence" as well as
"trade." As more and more human effort over the course of
the Industrial Revolution became involved in producing goods
and services for sale, the last sense of industry as well as
the slightly newer sense "systematic work or habitual
employment" grew in importance, to a large extent taking
over the word. We can even speak now of the Shakespeare
industry, rather like the garment industry. The sense
"diligence, assiduity," lives on, however, perhaps even to
survive industry itself."
~instruct-
to provide with knowledge or data, especially in a
methodical way; teacher (see teach, root
deik- binding energy*); a form of direction
or instruction; mentor (see root
men-1-
fret (29));
Middle English insturcten, from Latin īnstruere,
īnstrūct-, to prepare, instruct : in-, on; see
IN-2 (within, see root en) + struere,
to build
I seem to remain with the following
philosophy, otherwise you're just a self-helpist guru.
"There's no teacher who can teach you anything new,
he can just help us to remember the things we always knew."
Michael Cretu - David Fairstein
~obstruct-
to block or fill (a passage) with obstacles or an obstacle;
block: the unregulated loops and holes atmosphere
obstructed justice; to impede, retard, or interfere
with; hinder: obstructed the institution of family
life; to get in the way of so as to hide from sight;
obstructed thought; Latin obstruere, obstrūct- :
ob-, against; see OB- (inverse, see epi-;
oblast, Charles*) + struere, to pile up
~perestroika2- the organization restructuring of the Soviet
economy and bureaucracy that was begun in the 1980's;
economic and bureaucratic restructuring: "For several years
now...the U.S. has been going through its own perestroka at
the cost of unemployment and all kinds of painful but
ultimately beneficial change." (Peter Fuhrman - AHD),
Russian perestroĭka : Old Russian pere-, around,
again (see per-1-) + stroĭka, construction (from stroit', to build, from
Old Russian stroiti, from strojĭ, order,
(see root ster-2-)
~prostrate-
implanted use, to
somehow make (oneself) bow or kneel down in humility or
adoration; thrown down flat; to lay low; overcome; see
submission; prone; emotionally incapacitated; Botany:
Growing flat along the ground, Middle English prostraten,
from prostrat, prostrate, from Latin prōstrātus,
past participle of prōsternere, to throw down : pro-,
forward; see PRO-1 + sternere, to spread, cast down
Don't confuse prostrate with
prostate (gland), from proļstanai, to set
before : pro-, in front; see PRO-2 + histanai,
to set, place, root stā-. The difference
between the two prose are that the first means "acting in
place of; substituting," and the second is "earlier,
before; anterior". The prostration is closely
associated with prostitution, and the meaning of the
first pro. See root
per-1-
planck's constant (30)
The definition of prostitution
states: offering or devoting one's
talents to an unworthy use or cause. The examples
of this in our society are endless, and evident in the
professional financial system.
~sternum-
a long flat bone in most vertebrates that is situated along
the ventral midline of the thorax and articulates with the
ribs; the manubrium of the sternum articulates with the
clavicles in human beings and certain other vertebrates,
also called breastbone, New Latin, from Greek sternon,
breast, breastbone
~strain2-
the collective descendants (born after) of a common
ancestor; a race, stock, line, or breed; a genealogical line
of ancestry united in an individual family, or lineage;
Biology: a group of organisms of the same species,
having distinctive characteristics but not usually
considered a separate breed or variety: a superior strain
of organic beans; a smooth strain of bacteria; an
artificial variety of a domesticated animal or plant; a kind
or sort: a nasty strain of pathology; an inborn or
inherited tendency or character; a streak or trace; the
tone, tenor, or substance of a verbal utterance or of a
particular or behavior; Music: a passage of
expression; a tune or an air: melodic strains of the violin;
a passage of poetic and especially lyrical expression; an
outburst or a flow of eloquent or impassioned language,
Middle English strene, from Old English strēon,
something gained, offspring
~stratagem1-
military maneuver designed to
deceive or surprise an enemy,
clever or underhanded scheme
for achieving an aggressive objective,
artifice, Middle English, from Old French stratageme,
from Old Italian stratagemma, from Latin
stratēgēma, from Greek stratēgein,
to be a general, from stratēgos, general : stratos,
army, (see ster-2-) + agein,
to lead, see
ag- secret agent
(11)
The possible truer meaning of
stratagem may be associated with the polka partner strata,
or stratum, which is the horizontal division and
parallel layering of earth into five zones, and one
transforming outer zone called the exosphere. The
troposphere (ground level), stratosphere (6
miles; 10 km), mesosphere (19 miles; 30 km),
thermosphere (50 miles; 80 km), and ionosphere
(250 miles; 400 km), compose the five living zones.
~strath-
Scots, a wide, flat river valley, Scottish Gaelic srath,
from Old Irish
~stratocracy-
government by the armed forces, Greek stratos, army +
(-CRACY, see root kar-)
The kar- root is that
of the constellation Cancer, includes the synkaryon,
and the gillyflower, which is the nut and the blade
associated with the third bell,
bhel-3- auriga*. The Pokorny for
kar- is Discordia*.
~stratus-
a low-altitude cloud formation consisting of a horizontal
layer of gray clouds, from Latin strātus, past
participle of sternere, to stretch, extend
~straw-
stalks of threshed grain, used as bedding and food for
animals, for thatching, and for weaving or braiding, as in
baskets; a single stalk of threshed grain; something, such
as a hat or basket, made of straw: straw hut; a slender tube
made of plastic, wood, or other material used for sucking
liquid or blowing air; something considered of minimal value
or importance; something that seems to offer little support:
grasping at straws; Color: of the color straw, yellowish,
golden; of, related to, or constituting a
straw man; hint of premonition;
Middle English, from Old English strēaw
The word history of straw and
berry, that forms strawberry is unknown, and
no information reveals why they were constructed, so the
surface of the berry is subjected to resemble straw,
but could also resemble such as the criosphinx, and others,
with its red, fleshy, and pungent sweet taste. According to
J. T. Garrett, in The Cherokee Herbal, there was an
old "Cherokee story about a woman and man having a conflict.
She leaves and he follows, but he is not able to find her.
He sees the strawberries that she leaves, and they come back
together to enjoy strawberry eating and "clearing-way"
discussions."
~street-
a homeless place where vehicle traffic resides;
thorough-fare; the public way where houses are often
aligned along its border as access; sidewalk; a
location in a city designated as the source of a crime
scene, poverty, or dereliction;
Wall Street; a habitual gathering apathetic to
conveniences, often and almost in all cases, excessive;
(see commute, root mei-1-; mad,
permeate, common; forced march*); an inherited false
empathy to connect or be forced to feed from the traffic
resulting in loss of bearing, or a natural household:
street people; a consideration for those who suffer from
unrestricted growth and capital; a consideration for those
who have been imprisoned by the public way, and now are
released, similarly to the way a wild animal is released
into the jungle out of its cage: at liberty; Middle
English strete, from Old English stręt, strēt,
from Late Latin strāta, paved road, from Latin,
feminine past participle of sternere, to stretch,
extend, pave
~streusel-
a crumblike topping for coffee cakes and rich breads,
consisting of flour, sugar, butter, cinnamon, and sometimes
chopped nuts; German, streusel, from Middle High
German ströusel, something strewn, from ströuwen,
to sprinkle, from Old High German strowwen
~strew-
to spread here and there; scatter; to cover (an area or
surface) with things scattered or sprinkled: "Italy. .
.was strewn thick with with the remains of Roman buildings."
(Bernard Berenson - AHD); to become dispersed over (a
surface); to spread something over a wide area;
disseminate (see root sē-; sow, seeds;
farsighted*); Middle English strēowian
~stroma-
the connective tissue framework of an organ, a gland, or
other structure, as distinguished from the tissues
performing the special functions of the organ or part; the
spongy, colorless framework of a red blood cell or other
cell, Late Latin strōma, mattress, covering, from
Greek, bed
~structure-
something made up of a number of parts that are held or put
together in a particular way: cabinet structure; the way in
which parts are arranged or put together to form a while;
makeup; buildup; the walls formed the structure;
the interrelations or arrangement of parts in a complex
entity: cell structure; Biology: the arrangement of
the tissues, organs, or other parts of an organism;
formation; Middle English, the process of building, from
Latin strūctūra, from strūctus, past
participle of struere, to construct
~substratum-
an underlying layer; a layer of earth beneath the surface
soil; subsoil, (see B Horizon); a foundation or groundwork;
the material on which another material is coated or
fabricated; Philosophy: the
characterless substance that supports attributes of reality?;
Biology: a substrate, New Latin, from neuter of Latin
substrātus, past participle of substernere, to
lay under : sub-, sub- + sternere, to stretch, spread
It may be that blood flow is only
considered an attribute to the body, and the connective
tissue supports it, however, this is arguable. The first
question would be, what contributes the creation of the
heart beat to remain and display consistency that provides
the flow in the first place?
~substruction-
a foundation; a substructure; Latin substrūctiō,
substrūctiōn, from substrūctus, past participle
of substernere, to build beneath : sub-, sub-
+ struere, to build, pile up |
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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