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"the moral poles of modern medicine: one one hand, a tinkering with procreation with at best ambiguous, at worst monstrous moral possibilities. On the other hand, scientific skill and cunning unambiguously in the service of hope." (Charles Krauthammer - AHD)
 
Root Groups: Excessive, Marble Venus, Homiletics

Chapter 58: The Assiduous White Bulls

February 13, 2009: The story of Europa (4th primer) begins with a masculine influence inserted into the stone house, of which is based on the mismatched arrangement of both feminine and masculine aspects. One of the three agents is quickly destroyed, Sarpedon, which seems to represent the hot sauce applied to cover or destroy the connection between discerning the differences between certain emotions, such as pleasure and desire. Patroclus, another warrior who is just killed also a friend of Achilles, may actually represent a weakness that is developed across the base with Minos, or what I seem to sense as the habeas corpus, or what is left of the individual. In the mythological sense, Minos controls envy, fear, and joy, but in a masculine sense.

Once this is accomplished, as in our current world, the body is controlled by the other centers, spirituality is monitored by the false church and happy campers or empyema; fear by creation of the dead body or the empyrean, seen as the twisted-fish compass; and emotions by only referring to them as "emotion", and dangerous, the empyreal. In facing the empyreal, it is Rhadamanthus, who is blessed by Zeus with exceptional sense of justice as the Bacchus for Dionysus, the god of wine and orgiastic franchise across the metope. To catch a glimpse of the transformation of the white bull, begin with the root sker-2- inspect (54). This seems to lead to the root ker-2- ear2**, which holds the second Dioscuri, which seems closely associated with the double-oxygen atoms (dioxide), that today has become a cloud of confusion nested in humanity. These four beasts reign over all land and sea, charged by the greed. Dioscuri shows the new Gemini telephone in the sky, where elation faces illation, see root telæ- gravity of love (16). This is overseen by the first Dioscuri tag with the root deiw- deadems (25), which holds Zeus, or the god of war and sky.

It also seems the boy in ker-2- ear2** is similar to a scout that is associated with Castor and Pollux. All this may seem to move farther into the cloud, but be warned, this is often the plan that is being implemented, and the confusion between being happy, and the knowledge used to accomplish it. Once a breech is ordered, the two oxygens (as feminine) may in sense create a declination of order, one that cannot be balanced, releasing the white cloud in the sky. Without excessive elaboration, the reader should pick up some good thought albeit the shock hidden within, as two dingoes are spotted hiding in the lex, and two new antinomies to add to the study list have been organized. A sense of Hal's stiff neck extending into the sky on one side of the house is strongly sensed, and then the master and lord duke it out in what may turn out to be a trashed Vega four-cylinder from hell. The white horse is not a bull, but anyone can see the pack ass meeting the fat lady Hesperus, from -, in the garden of evening being developed along these lines, as discovered.

We move through time into the Vesica Piscis, and possibly the world of Hyperion, who is the son of Gaea and Uranus, but this may only be the tall man, or the talisman. This may become the Hyperborrean, a mix between the summer lovers and the north wind, a form of navigation seemingly in the mind, that may hold more clues about the two ringhals that hide the fuzzy oasis.

Part one: Excessive

loopus47-accolade-ancillary-bucolic2-calash-chakra-charkha-chukker-col-collar-collet
-colony-colous-cullet-cult-cultivate-cycle-cyclo-cycloid-cyclone-cyclosis-decollate
-décolleté-encyclical-entelechy1-epicycle-hauberk-hawse-incult-inquiline-kolacky
-machicolate-palimpsest-palindrome-palingenesis-palinode-pole2-pratincole-pulley
-ringhals2-talisman-teleology-teleutospore-telic-telo-torticollis2-silvicolous-wheel
-et-
k
wel-1- to revolve, move around, sojourn, dwell, Basic form *kwel-, COLONY, CULT, CULTIVATE, (CULTURE); INCULT, INQUILINE, SILVICOLOUS, Latin- colere, to till, cultivate, inhabit; Suffixed form *kwel-es-, TELEC, (TELIUM), TELO; ENTELECHY, TALISMAN, TELEOLOGY, (TELEOST), TELEUTOSPORE, Greek- telos, "completion of a cycle," consummation, perfection, end, result; Suffixed reduplicated form *kwel-(e)-kwel-o-, circle, Old English- hwēol-, hweogal, wheel, Germanic- *hwewlaz, CYCLE, CYCLO-, CYCLOID, CYCLONE, CYCLOSIS; (BYCYCLE), ENCYCLICAL, EPICYCLE, Greek- kuklos, circle, wheel, CHAKRA, CHUKKER, Sanskrit- cakram, circle, wheel, Metathesized form *kwe-lkw-o-, Old Persian- *carka-, charkha; O-grade form *kw-ol-, Suffixed form *kw-ol-so-, "that on which the head turns," neck, [ Old Norse- hāls, hawse, neck, ship's bow; Middle Dutch- hals, ringhals, neck; Old French- hauberc, hauberk, Germanic- compound *h(w)als-berg-, "neck protector," gorget (*bergan, to protect; see bhergh-1-); all sourced Germanic *h(w)alsaz ]; COL, COLLAR, COLLET, CULLET, ACCOLADE, DECOLLATE1, DÉCOLLETÉ, MACHICOLATE, (MACHICOLATION), TORTICOLLIS, Latin- collum, neck; Suffixed form *kw-ol-ā-, -COLOUS, PRATINCOLE, Latin- -cola and incola, inhabitant (in-, in; see en); Suffixed form *kw-ol-o-, Latin- anculus, ancillary, "he who bustles about," servant (an-, short for ambi-, around, about; see ambhi-); POLE1, PULLEY, Greek- polos, axis of a sphere; Greek- boukalos, bucolic, cowherd, from -kolos, herdsman; Suffixed form *kwol-es (probably a blend of o-grade *kw-ol-o- and expected e-grade *kw-el-es-), CALASH, KOLACKY, Slavic kolo, koles-, wheel; Old Iranian *vahā-carana-, "sale-traffic," from *carana-, trade, traffic; Suffixed zero-grade form *kw-ļ-i-, PALIMPSEST, PALINDROME, PALINGENESIS, PALINODE, Greek- palin, again (< "revolving"). [Pokorny 1. kwel- 640] excessive** (bucolic1 - gwou-) (entelechy2 - segh-) (pole1 - pag-) (ringhals1 - sker-2-) (torticollis1 - terkw-)
~accolade- (mutable noun: nōmen, nōmin) an expression of approval; praise; special acknowledgement; an award; ceremonial embrace; greeting of salutation; bestowal of Knighthood; (transitive) honor: "His works are invariably accoladed as definitive even as they sparkle and spark." (Malcolm S. Forbes - AHD); French, an embrace, accolade, from accoler, to embrace, from Old French acoler, from Vulgar Latin *accolāre : Latin ad-; see AD- (ad- amount1, a3*) + Latin collum, neck; also see amount2 men-2- frey (29)

~ancillary- (adjective: to add to : ad-, ad- + iacere, to throw); subordinate: "For Degas, sculpture was never more than ancillary to his painting." (Herbert Read - AHD); auxiliary; helping: an ancillary pump; fixed noun- something such as a workbook, notebook, or a subordinate textbook; Archaic: servant; from Latin ancilla, maidservant, feminine diminutive of anculus, servant

~bucolic2- (adjective: to add to : ad-, ad- + iacere, to throw); of or characteristic of the countryside or its people; rustic; rural; of or characteristic of shepherds or flocks; pastoral; fixed noun- pastoral poem; farmer or shepherd; a rustic, Latin būcolicus, pastoral, from Greek boukolikos, from boukolos, cowherd : bous, cow; (see gwou- wild ox, bull, Boötes, decapolis*) + kolos, herdsman, see kwel-1-

Pastor is from the root -, which has two Pokorny's, one is Grand canal*, and the second, Helen of Troy*. It includes the bezoar1, which is a palindrome and a half. It is also like the trimmings from the fur of the lion, and in sound and feeling, it is the paw, and part of the programming begins with per-1- planck's constant (30). It would be good to note that a farmer is not necessarily a shepherd, or vise versa, and this seems to be constructing an subordinate situation between growing good, and gathering or controlling food specifically meat, or that of the walking dead.

~calash- (mutable noun: nōmen, nōmin) a light carriage with two or four low wheels and a collapsible top; a women's folding bonnet of the late 18th century, French calèche, from Germanic kalesche, from Czech kolesa, from plural of kolo, koles-, wheel

~chakra- (mutable noun: nōmen, nōmin) one of seven centers of spiritual energy in the human body according to yoga philosophy; (see fear, per-4- hammertoe (33)), Sanskrit cakram, wheel, circle

The spine is not a circle, and Europa is not your body, or are you the 7th in distance outside yourself unless you've become a cue ball about to be carefully placed as Jupiter. Yoga seems an add on to the root yeug- from an o-grade meaning union, which may represent the yoke, as the Pokorny is destabilize*, and this seems built from the root sequence occurring from the yes- root, or fermentation, and the following yeu-, immediately jumping in the well, and then straight to yeug-, which emulates the jugate, or the union of pairs, as described in the yoke, leaving yogi bear asking questions.

~charkha- (mutable noun: nōmen, nōmin) a spinning wheel used in India for spinning cotton, Hindustandi carkhā, from Persian charkha, diminutive of charkh, wheel, from Old Persian *carka

The regional entry charivari is polka partner to charkha, and the union of head and heavy. See root ker-1- dwarf star (53). Charity sits above this from the root -, which pokes to diamagnetic*, which seems to make sense, as anyone who desires another who is not desiring their whore, as described, is considered morally wrong, as with the label, yet this feeling is universal in all situations and relationships. So the truth of the matter is no one is more a whore than anyone else, especially coming from men who name carriages after women's hats.

~chukker- (mutable noun: nōmen, nōmin) Sports: one period of play equal to 7 and 1/2 minutes in the game of Polo, Hindu cakkar, circle, turn, from Sanskrit cakram

According to this, your chakra is closely associated with a bunch of horse running around trying to find it, just to smack it to another location. Here is also in progression a possible place of the chums, Minos and Rhadamanthus, and between the channels received, and maybe the long chunnel, where the curiosity for the true church rests, along with the stigma of separation between the state and the church-city union.

~col- fixed noun- a pass between two mountain peaks or a gap in a ridge, French, from Old French neck, from Latin collum, also see cola1 (regional entry) carbonated drink, cola nut, also called ◊ dope; colcannon, Old Irish cāl, from Latin caulis + ceannan, white-headed, see weid- spice melonge (25)

~collar- (mutable noun: nōmen, nōmin) the part of a garment that encircles the neck; a necklace; a restraining or identifying band of leather, metal, or plastic forced onto an animal for manipulation; the cushioned part of a harness that presses against the shoulders of a draft animal; Biology: an encircling structure or bandlike markings, as around the neck of an animal, suggestive of a collar; any of various ringlike devices used to limit, guide, or secure a machine part; Middle English coler, from Old French colier, from Latin collāre, from collum, neck

~collet- (mutable noun: nōmen, nōmin) a cone-shaped sleeve used for holding circular or rodlike pieces in a lathe or other machine; a metal collar used in watchmaking to join one end of a balance spring to the balance staff; a circular flange or rim, as in a ring, into which a gem is set, French diminutive of col, collar, from Latin collum, neck

~colony- (mute: nōmen, nōmin) a group of emigrants or their descendants who settle in a distant territory but remain subject to or closely associated with the parent country; colonization of land; a region politically controlled or confiscated as colonization of land or property; interdependent; a group of people that by either the same interests, or by special offers, are enticed to move upon or into a colony under the control of the parent political operation: strangers on stolen land; a group of people who have been institutionalized into a relatively remote or private area; Ecology: a group of the same kind of animals, plants, or one-celled organisms living or growing together: bee colony; Microbiology: a visible growth of microorganisms, usually in a solid or semisolid nutrient medium, Middle English colonie, from Latin colōnus, settler, from colere, to cultivate

~colous- suffix, having a specific kind of habitat: arenicolous (living and burrowing in sand); from Latin -cola, tiller, inhabitant

~cullet- (mutable noun: nōmen, nōmin) scraps of broken or waste glass gathered for remelting, especially with new material, probably alteration of collet, neck of glass left on the blowing iron, from French collar, diminutive of col, neck, from Old French, from Latin collum

~cult- (mute: nōmen, nōmin) any religious entity or sect that is defined as false, or is based on extreme or dangerous philosophy inclusive of warring, militarization, or weaponry of mass destruction capability with its followers often living in unconventional manners that align with a demeanor of killing or death of living beings under an empirical or authoritarian rule; the implementation of this disorder as a system of community, worship, ritual, and praise; a usually hypothetical or fantastical method or regimen claimed oppressively upon others through a false or improvable originator, thus making the false claimants descendents of an anti-being; obsessive often faddish devotion to the anti-being; a sector of study often considered esoteric or exoteric; Latin cultus, worship, from past participle of colere, to cultivate

Exoteric was added, as science and religion must merge at some point in time, and esoteric is from the en- centerfold* root, while exoteric is from the eghs- carnallite* root. It is good to note the differences between in and out, as this is a major factor in initiating the description manifested, and often seems principally based on the anti-originator effect being applied.

~cultivate- (mutable module: verbum, word) to improve and prepare soil (land) by hoeing, plowing, or adding unnatural chemicals in order to raise crops for food to eat as the major source of food; till; to loosen or dig soil around (growing plants); to grow or tend ( a plant or crop of food); Biology: culture promotion; to reform or refine by removing weeds or unnecessary elements that reduce effectiveness of growth; to nurture a relationship (with a plant; garden; living thing), Medieval Latin cultivāre, cultīvāt-, from cultīvus, tilled, from Latin cultus, past participle of colere, to till

~cycle- (fixed noun: nōmen, nōmin) a period of time during which a characteristic, often regularly repeated event or sequence of events occur: sunspots are known to increase and decrease in intensity in an 11-year cycle; a single complete execution of a periodically repeated phenomenon: a trip around the sun reveals four seasons that cycle constituted by the tilting earth; a periodically repetition of record: cycle of the ice ages; an orbit of a celestial body or a group of bodies; (transitives) a long period of time; age; the aggregate of traditional poems or stories organized around a central theme: Schubert's song cycles; label for vehicles with two or three wheels; bicycle; Botany: a circular or whorled arrangement of flower parts such as those of petals or sepals, Middle English, from Late Latin cyclus, from Greek kuklos, circle

~cyclo- or cycl-, prefix, circular; cycle: cycloalkane; cycloparaffin; a cyclic compound: cyclohexane; Greek kuklo-, from kuklos, circle

~cycloid- (adjective: to add to : ad-, ad- + iacere, to throw); resembling a circle; Zoology: thin, rounded, and smooth; disklike; used of fish scales; Psychiatry: measurement of record in relation to emotions that duplicate intensity such as elation, and the classification of a perceived depression; cyclothymia; Mathematics: a curve traced by a point on the circumference of a circle that rolls on a straight line; Zoology: a fish having cycloid scales, French cycloide, from Greek kukloeidēs, circular : kuklos, circle + oeidēs, -oid, from eidos, shape, form, see weid- spice melonge (25)

This particular adjective is attached to another root, but the oeidēs, and -oid suffixes are left unmarked. In Greek Mythology, it is Cyclops who is any of three one-eyed Titans who forged thunderbolts for the psycho Zeus in and around Sicily, from Greek kuklōps : kuklos, circle + ōps, eye, see myopia, okw- gmt (44)

~cyclone- (fixed noun: nōmen, nōmin) Meteorology: an atmospheric system characterized by the rapid, inward circulation of air masses about a low-pressure center, usually accompanied by stormy, often destructive weather, rotating counter-clockwise from space in the Northern Hemisphere, and clockwise from space in the Southern Hemisphere; violent, rotating thunderstorm surrounding a intensified pressure related system; any of various devices using centrifugal force to separate components, Greek kuklōn, present participle of kukloun, to rotate, from kuklos, circle

~cyclosis- (mute: nōmen, nōmin) the streaming rotary motion of protoplasm within certain cells and one-celled organisms, New Latin, from Greek kuklōsis, a surrounding, from kukloun, to surround, from kuklos, circle

~decollate- (mutable module: verbum, word) decollate1: to behead; decapitate; Latin dēcollāre, dēcollāt- : -, de- ( de- bias*, B horizon* ) + collum, neck; decollate2: no derivative, to separate multiple copies

~décolleté- cut low at the neck line: a décolleté dress; wearing a garment that is low-cut or strapless, French, past participle of décolleter, to lower a neckline, uncover the neck : : -, de- ( de- bias*, B horizon* ) + collet, collar (from Old French, diminutive of col, neck, collar, from Latin collum)

~encyclical- (implanted adjective: to add to : ad-, ad- + iacere, to throw); intended for general or wide circulation; (transitive module) Roman Catholic Church: a papal letter addressed to the bishops of the Church or to the hierarchy of a particular country, from Late Latin encyclicus, circular, from Greek enkuklios : en-, en-2 (see en- centerfold*) + kuklos, circle, see encyclopedia, root pau- hemlock*

~entelechy1- (mute: nōmen, nōmin) in the philosophy of Aristotle, the condition of a thing whose essence is fully realized; actuality; in some philosophical systems, a vital force that directs an organism toward self-fulfillment, Late Latin entelechīa, from Greek entelekheia : entelēs, complete (en, in, see en-2) + telos, completion, see kwel-1- + ekhein, to have, see segh- hyperbaton*

The second entelechy is the attachment to the chia pet or a type of school that doesn't really intend to educate, but to program, as if it really did educated, everyone would be much different than they presently are, and not displaying a world of idiots, and humans that thrive on death and destruction. The Pokorny for segh- is page 888, of which is all hype.

~epicycle- (mute: nōmen, nōmin) in Ptolemaic cosmology, a small circle, the center of which moves on the circumference of a larger circle at whose center of which moves on the circumference of a larger circle at whose center is Earth and the circumference of which describes the orbit of one of the planets around Earth; Mathematics: a circle whose circumference rolls along the circumference of a fixed circle, thereby generating an epicycloid or a hypocycloid, Middle English epicycle, from Late Latin epicyclus, from Greek epukuklos : epi-, epi- (see root epi-, oblast, Charles*) + kuklos, circle

The main epi- root word oblast is attached to the wal- root, of which is Maundy Thursday*, and related to the scriptures from John in The Bible about loving one another, but this seems to have been moved up the ladder to where the washing of feet is only in chum territory.
References: - deplume (53); kom- entablature*


~hauberk- (mute:
nōmen, nōmin) a long military tunic made of chain mail (flexible armor made of enmeshed steel fibers), Middle English, from Old French hauberc, of Germanic origin

~hawse- the part of a ship where the hawseholes are located; hawsehole; the space between the bows and anchors of an anchored ship; the arrangement of a ship's anchor cables when both starboard and port anchors are secured, Middle English hals, forward curve of a strake, probably from Old Norse hāls, neck, ship's bow

The hawsehole is a member of al-2- bomb*, among other words, like to grow and nourish, while also retard the growth of, so a bit of work is needed to sort it away from al-3- cyclops*.

~incult- (implanted adjective: to add to : ad-, ad- + iacere, to throw); not cultured; coarse; Latin incultus : in, not (see IN-1) + cultus, past participle of colere, to till, cultivate

This creation seems to stem off the polka partner inculpate, which is another implant that adds the blame with the second in, or in2, "within blame". This is immediately followed by incumbent, or the leaning upon the self for obligation to the ob-session. The incunabulum represents the swaddling clothes or cradle, and infancy, rooted to kei-1- dissentient (49), and the carpenter follows, with kers- ectoderm*. Most of the inc- prefixes are implants, and possible made from the incus root kau-  congas* (22), where the anvil is flattened like a coin, or incuse, "forged with a hammer". There are several hundred prefixes of inc, beginning with Inca which is from Spanish, from Quechua inka, ruler, man of royal lineage. This has nothing to do with electuary, rather wisdom and learning from a truer elder. The very next inc- is incandesce which is a tag for incandescence as an attempt to kill it, with the kand- root, or candidate implementation of learning and wisdom without the high degree of emotional understanding using the dipole effect, as plainly visibly implemented along the red/blue War Inc. line.

Inc roots:
kelæ-1- incalescent, donkey*; kand- dipole moment*; sker-1- incarnate, integument (54); inception, kap- dirge*; inch, oi-no- canoe birch*; incident, kad- diamondback*; incite, kei-2- dispraise*; incline, klei-  EMS (21); incondite,
dhē-  three fates (12); increase, ker-2- ear2**

~inquiline- (mute: nōmen, nōmin) an animal that characteristically lives commensally in the nest, burrow, or dwelling place of an animal of another species, Latin inquilīnus, lodger, tenant : in-, in; see in-2 + colere, to inhabit

~kolacky- a square, sweet bun with a fruit or poppy seed filling, Czech kolače, wheel-shaped cake, plural of kolač, from Old Church Slavonic, wheel

~machicolate- (mute module: verbum, word) Medieval Latin machicolāre, machicolāt-, from Old French machicoller, from machicoleis, machicolation, from Old French machacol : macar, to crush (from Vulgar Latin *maccāre) + col, neck (from Latin collum); machicolation: (mute: nōmen, nōmin) to provide deceitful furnishings that project from a gallery at the top of a castle wall, supported by a row of corbeled arches (raven's beaks) and having openings in the floor through which stones and boiling liquids could be dropped on attackers; see hyperbole; one of those openings; a row of small corbeled arches used as an ornamental architectural feature, see astragal, merlon, blackbird, blackberry

~palimpsest- (mute: nōmen, nōmin) label for a manuscript that has been re-written on or above the current text, typically of papyrus or parchment showing signs of the previous text; an object, a place, or an area that reflects its history; mysticete; (see mūs-, mouse, muscle, gaze hound*); Latin palimpsēstum, from Greek palimpsēston, neuter of palimpsēstos, scraped again : palin, again + psēn, to scrape

~palindrome- (mutable: nōmen, nōmin) a word, phrase, verse, or sentence that reads the same backwards or forwards; segment of double-stranded DNA in which the nucleotide sequence of one strand reads in reverse order to that of the complementary strand; from Greek palindromos, running back again, recurring : palin, again + dromos, a running

Besides words themselves that create the palindrome, there is the glass case behind the character EV in the movie V, with the rotten fish on top, as analogical to the two fish and loaves, along with the zodiac diagram shown earlier with two fish in palindrome positions still related to this journey, and the reconstruction of its meaning.

~palingenesis- (mutable: nōmen, nōmin) a doctrine of transmigration of souls; metempsychosis (reincarnation; see root bhes- banshee (29)); Biology: the repetition by a single organism of various stages in the evolution of its species during embryonic development, Greek palin, again + -GENESIS

This does seem related to the pall, and the elongated mantle that projects up instead of the front to back, which may be emphasizing this power from the ground up directly through Satan. The pallor, or pel-1- root is a strange one, it is the reddish yellow, which aligns with this anomaly, while it is also the black and white bird, or stork. It's Pokorny is being worked out for the group, and may change, but for now it is pel-1- gimp3*. Its emphasis is the Lion or pelt, and pel-5- title is the heart*

~palinode- (mute: nōmen, nōmin) a poem or hyperbole in which the writer or speaker retracts something said in previous poems, verses, or hyperboles; formal statement of retraction; from Late Latin palinōdia, from Greek palinōidia : palin, again, + ōidē, song; see parody, root wed-2- ansate cross*

~pole2- (mutable: nōmen, nōmin) either extremity of an axis through a sphere; Geography: either of the regions contiguous to the extremities of the earth's rotational axis, the North Pole, and the South Pole; Physics: a magnetic pole; either of two oppositely charged terminals, as in an electric cell or battery; either end of the spindle formed in a cell mitosis; the point on a nerve cell where a process originates; either of two antithetical ideas, propensities, forces, or positions: "the moral poles of modern medicine: one one hand, a tinkering with procreation with at best ambiguous, at worst monstrous moral possibilities. On the other hand, scientific skill and cunning unambiguously in the service of hope." (Charles Krauthammer - AHD); a fixed point of reference?; Mathematics: the origin in a polar coordinate system, the vertex of a polar angle, Middle English, from Old French, from Latin polus, from Greek polos, axis, sky

The first pole, Latin pālus, from pag- granadilla*, previously downgraded by the one above, is likely much older, so they were improperly marked not only by lack of root and sound connection, but by priority over the pole that always divides, and uses energy to manifest itself from the power of anti-magnetic properties, and if this is applied to science and politics, one can easily see how the beasts feed as a dying battery. Vertex is the apex from the root wer-2-  vera (15). The road ahead with the pa- roots reveals much, and a sense of the papa effect being used against you.

~pratincole- any of the various Old World shore birds of the genus Glareola, having brown and black plumage, long pointed wings, a forked tail, and a tapered bill, New Latin prātincola : Latin prātum, meadow + Latin incola, inhabitant

Indeed, the above description is strange, as take a look at what the meadow root is constructed upon here, mē-4-  flyleaf (22). And, the Germanic- *mēdiz, Suffixed form *mē-twā-, a mown field, as one pill, and the Old English- mæd (oblique case mædwe), meadow, Germanic- *mēdtwō, as another pill, both not matching the description from prātum, meadow. Don't forget that a doe is a deer. Also note the cola nut, also called ◊ dope, from col. There also seems a sense of coming into port but only with permission along with the prat- prefix being tagged as meaning the buttock with an unknown origin. The etymology immediately provides the prek- which is derogatory in nature, and that of prayer, or asking, and the Pokorny is Hannibal2*, a loose place for a lost saint.

~pulley- (mute?: nōmen, nōmin: reference- legh- dama dama*, fang*); a device capable of decreasing the amount of effort required for lifting heavy objects by altering the size of wheels that contain grooves on their outside rims where a rope or chain runs along the edge or is pulled: belt driven eight cylinder;  Middle English poley, from Old French polie, and from Medieval Latin poliva, both ultimately from Greek polos, axis

The definition for pulley was poor, so an improvement was attempted, and this needs expanding, as this concept is quite thick, which seems the emphasis has been put on the axis in order to cover the science around the pulley itself, which is extreme. The legh- root also seems directly associated with the lair, outlaw, lees, and the dragnet.

~ringhals2- (mutable: nōmen, nōmin) an African snake ( hemachatus haemachatus ) that spits venom at the eyes of an attacker, sometimes causing blindness, also called spitting cobra, obsolete Afrikaans : ring, ring (from Middle Dutch rinc, (see sker-2- inspect (54)) + hals, neck (from Middle Dutch, see kwel-1-)

Hal's neck may be the axis that spins which stays within a certain range for the time being.

~talisman- (mutable: nōmen, nōmin) an object marked with (magic signs) and believed to confer on its bearer supernatural powers of protection; something that apparently (readily seen) to have magic power: Beauty is sometimes a most powerful talisman for the master; French talisman or Spanish talismán, or Italian talismano, all from Arabic tilasm, from Late Greek telesma, from Greek, consecration ceremony, from telein, to consecrate, fulfill, from telos, result

The magic for the bearer may have to do with the telæ- gravity of love (16) root which includes the Atlas, among others, that holds up Earth, and the Atlantic ocean which seems to rest in the pole before land separated, as perceived. This also includes the toll, and tolerate, from Latin tolerāre, to bear, endure. This is now perceived as a tax or charge directed at the middle of classifications, and this exemplifies the talion, and the collate. (root group is scheduled to be updated)

~teleology- (implanted mute: nōmen, nōmin) Philosophy: the study of purpose or creation as design in natural phenomena; a blending of natural phenomena with ultimatum; purposeful development applied to science of living as compared to nature or history directed to an final end; Greek teleios, teleos, perfect, complete (from telos, end, result) + -LOGY

Polka trap: The telencephalon, also called end brain, is the anterior portion of the forebrain. This leaves teleology as the black hole seeking the next root, ost-  gossamer (13). This is where the bones begin (teleost) in living creatures from the sea, away from sharks, rays, and skates, or cartilaginous creatures who hang out on logs, and the summer lovers. sound key: kwell, dwell

~teleutospore- (mutable: nōmen, nōmin) see teliospore (thick-walled, usually blackish resting spore of some rusts and smuts), Greek teleutē, termination (from telos, end + spore)

This is referencing a beginning as termination with a purpose without the de. This leads to the two del roots, the first includes linger and Lent as the black flag*, and the second, the Taal2, where the bomb is delivered. del-2- bison bison*; al-2-bomb* and the family is made in al-3- "all men" cyclops*

~telic- (implanted adjective: to add to : ad-, ad- + iacere, to throw); directed or tending toward a goal or purpose; purposeful, Greek telikos, from telos, end

~telo- or tel- prefix, end: telolecithal; telomere; telophase; telotaxis; from Greek telos, end

There is an element close by named telurium, Atomic Element #52, Symbol Te, which just happens to have an adjective tellurous, especially with a valance of four which is only made as a byproduct of refining copper. The tellurion shows how Earth rotates around the sun to reveal the four seasons. The addition of the telocentric, which completes the telo- prefixes, may represent the oasis, or the sis in the fang as the Vale of Tempe, a valley in northeast Greece between Mount Olympus and Mount Ossa.

~torticollis2- (mutable: nōmen, nōmin) a contracted state of the neck muscles producing an unnatural position of the head, also called wryneck; New Latin : Latin tortus, twisted, past participle of torquēre, to twist; (see terkw- machismo (27)) + collum, neck

~silvicolous- (adjective: to add to : ad-, ad- + iacere, to throw); growing in or inhabiting woodlands, from Latin silvacola, inhabitant of the forest : silva, forest + colere, to dwell, till

There seems a sense of confusion when it comes to believing that the -cola is the inhabitant that dwells, whereas, one can see the Koala bear hugging a tree in the valley of the sea. There is also confusion between the sill and the sash, the first bearing the weight, while the second is non-existent, and seems to only serve as a chassis. This is like taking hope and beating it with a whip.

~wheel- (mute: nōmen, nōmin) a solid disk or a rigid circular ring connected by spokes to a hub, designed to turn (spin) around an axle which serves as the axis or center; steering wheel; potter's wheel; water wheel or paddles; (transitives) a game of chance; roulette; Obsolete: a torture wheel; imaginary forces or energy that are a part of time; revolution; miles per hour; see military maneuvers; motor vehicle; fixed noun- to turn around a central axis; revolve; to fly in a circular course; orbit; to turn or whirl around; pivot: "The boy wheeled and the fried eggs leaped from his tray." (Ivan Gold - AHD); (transitives) a mechanism of control; unscrupulous behavior, Middle English, from Old English hwēol

Just to note, many concept cross over into this nomen land, such as the fulcrum, which support a lever that pivots. Even though our solar system seems to pivot from the sun, the light may be that which is the fulcrum on which it balances. The lever is from the root legwh- fantail* This is the second light, that which seems weightless, similar to magic, and the first leprechaun.

Part two: Marble Venus

Vesica Piscis14-corporal1,3-corporate-corporeal-corposant-corps-corpse-corpulence-corpus
-corpuscle-corsage-corse-corset-leprechaun2-midriff
-et-
k
wrep- body, Suffixed form kwrep-es-, Old English- hrif, midriff, belly, Germanic- *hrefiz-; Suffixed zero-grade form kwŗp-es-, CORPORAL1,3, CORPORATE, CORPOREAL, CORPOSANT, CORPS, CORPSE, CORPULENCE, CORPUS, CORPUSCLE, CORSAGE, CORSE, CORSET; LEPRECHAUN, Latin corpus, body, substance, NO MORE DATA [Pokorny 1. krep- 620] marble venus* (corporal2 - kaput-)
-corporal1,3- (implanted adjective: to add to : ad-, ad- + iacere, to throw); of or related to the body; bodily; (mute: nōmen, nōmin) Ecclesiastical: a white linen cloth on which the consecrated elements are placed during the celebration of the Eucharist; Middle English, from Old French, (from Medieval Latin corporāle for corporālis), of the body (the Eucharist bread being representative of Christ's body), from corpus, corpor-, body, see kwrep-; corporal2: (mute: nōmen, nōmin) military ranking that is classified as (noncommissioned) in a class (Army) that is ranked above the classification of (private first class), but also below the classification of (sergeant); Obsolete? French, alteration of caporal, from Old Italian caporale, from capo, head, from Latin caput, see kaput- disarray*

I guess everyone has heard the saying, "Who would Jesus bomb?", or in this case, his dead body is worshipped in a Satanist ritual pawned off as legitimate while the body becomes the private, and the sergeant, seeming to come from French and defined as "slave", serves as the cloak that covers the legs. This is similar to the Cyclops in that the being eating bread has no head, and has two arms coming out each side as defined as the "sergeant of arms", who keeps order for the beasts. The emulation of death and destruction as worthy is beyond comprehension, and certainly a disease that is propagated as legitimate when it is complete Zionists fantasy.

~corporate- (implanted adjective: to add to : ad-, ad- + iacere, to throw); formed into a corporation; incorporated; united with a cloaked body; collective envy used as a tool; Latin corporātus, past participle of corporāre, to make into a dead body, from corpus, body

The word cooperation leads to coordination from (ar- cosmic compass (17)), yet this is converted to a tool that can be utilized and abused at maximum levels to serve the master corporeal entity that exists in the red cloud. The creation of the "k-nine" or the nine words contained on one page is built off the corpse, the dead body, and focused on the material envy girl, or that of Satan.

~corporeal- (implanted adjective: to add to : ad-, ad- + iacere, to throw); of, related to, or characteristic of the body; bodily; of a material nature; tangible (see touch, handle, contaminate, tag- lobby*);

~corposant1- (mute: nōmen, nōmin) see Saint Elmo's Fire, Portuguese and obsolete Spanish corpo santo, both from Latin corpus sanctum, holy body : corpus, body, see kwrep- + sanctus, body, past participle of sancīre, to consecrate, see sak- hoy (57)

~corps- (mutable: kōr-, nōmen, nōmin) a separated branch of a tree of power stemming from militarization and armory of corporations who can be labeled with special functions to promote War Inc.; tactical ground unit (army and/or marines) beheaded by (lieutenant general) and composed of two or more divisions or auxiliary slaves; a group of people who form a dead body; front group; French, from Old French, from Latin corpus, body

~corpse- (mute: nōmen, nōmin) a dead body, especially the dead body of a human or one thought to be from human form; body; Middle English corps, from Latin corpus

~corpulence- (mute: nōmen, nōmin) the condition of being excessively fat in concept of the body; obesity; Middle English, corporality, from Latin corpulentia, corpulence, from corpulentus, corpulent, from corpus, body

~corpus- (mutable: nōmen, nōmin) Anatomy: the main part of a body or structure: corpus callosum; distinct bodily mass: corpus striatum; Music: the overall length of the violin; a collective of writings as addressed; the principality of the dead body or capital distinguished from the profit or excessive charge forming another dead body, no more data; see possible link to this creation at root - hesperus*

Am unsure what Julius is leading to on the - root, will need to work it awhile, as it is thick. The creation of the Corpus Christi, a party held on another Thursday, or Thor day with just the right Thoth, held after the reference to Trinity Sunday, is a nomen for the dead body of Jesus that has been altered into a heteromorphic meaning specifically focused on the emotions, and the nervous system, and this has nothing to do with the teacher from Nazareth.

~corpuscle- (mutable: nōmen, nōmin) an unattached body cell, such as a blood or lymph cell; a rounded, globular mass of cells, such as the pressure receptor on certain nerve endings; a discrete particle, such as a photon, or an electron; a minute globular particle; Latin corpusculum, diminutive of corpus, body

All nine words above concert themselves from one page (421) and referenced as the "k-nine",  and the sound keys lead to a core problem with the - root. It also seems to be associated with the corral, which is from the carpenter root kers- ectoderm*. This is also where the nerves and sense organs develop based on three layers within the outer most layer.

~corsage- (mutable: nōmen, nōmin) a small bouquet of flowers worn by a woman at the shoulder or waist or on the wrist; the bodice or waist of a dress; Middle English torso (Italian, trunk of a statue), from Old French, from cors, body, from Latin corpus

The word cor-sage seems built onto the second sage, or the sagebrush called ramona, with the catholic root sol- juvenile*, based on the corruption stemming out of history, inclusive of Justinian I and the jussive pushed forward in time. It is as though the woman is a dead body to be used by the corsair.

~corse- (mutable: nōmen, nōmin) Archaic: a corpse (course of death and worship of the dead mind) Middle English cors, from Old French, from Latin corpus

~corset- (mutable: nōmen, nōmin) Medieval close-fitting outer garment that serves to enhance or position the waist, buttock, and breasts of a woman; an enclosure enforced by stays; bodice, Middle English, bodice, from Old French diminutive of cors, body, from Latin corpus

The magic of the pitiful crying wolf is set like a vest possibly from the transitive intensifier bode, which foretells as announcement, and rooted to bheudh- baroque (51). The word bodacious is explained as: "She's so bowdacious unreasonable when she's raised [irritated]." (William T. Thompson - AHD). The quotes related to bodies is plentiful: "Imagination bodies forth the forms of things unknown." (Shakespeare - AHD); related to dead bodies and carcasses: "Close to the western summit there is a dried and frozen carcass of a leopard." (Ernest Hemingway - AHD). Also, of note to masculine influence in the chalcedony arrangement, the Bodhisattva rests upon the bodice in lex, and the bios1 shows their locations that seem to reflect off each adjacent side. Bodhisattva is also attached to the root es- christ (43), but in the arrangement, the body of Christ has been moved to the dark cloud, while the human body is absent, as pathological evident in society with the propagated influences.

~leprechaun2- (mutable: nōmen, nōmin) the postulation of a race of elves in Irish folklore who supposedly can reveal hidden treasure to someone who catches him, Irish Gaelic luprachán, alteration of Middle Irish luchrupán, from Old Irish luchorpān : luchorp (-, small; see legwh- fantail* + corp, body, from Latin corpus, see kwrep-) + -ān, diminutive suffix

The word history tells us that the Old Irish luchorpān is an influence from church Latin, and mentions habeas corpus, which means "to have a body", but the body described is a crying wolf with the strange looking pan standing in the mirror. Of note in sound, the Lepus is a constellation in the Southern Hemisphere near Orion and Columba, from Latin lepus, hare.

~midriff- (mutable: nōmen, nōmin) see diaphragm (sense 1); classification for the middle outer portion of the front of the human body, extending roughly from just below the breast to the waistline, Middle English midrif, from Old English midhrif : midd, mid; (see MID1, medhyo- fond*) + hrif, belly

References:
-Berber- member of North African region and those of mostly Moslem heritage that have settled or been forced to live within the region from Egypt and Morocco forming the Casablanca feeling laying on the floor, and the battles between comfort and convenience. The belly in etymological terms (root bhelgh- automatic pilot*) lays between the three bhel's and the three bears, inclusive of balance, where the real band gathers.

bher-1- aviatrix (37)
bher-2- narthex (37)

Part three: Homiletics

Erebus

9-erepsin-rapacious-rape-rapid-rapine-rapt-ravin-ravish-surreptitious
-et-rep-
to snatch, Suffixed zero-grade form *rap-yo-, RAPACIOUS, RAPE1, RAPID, RAPINE, RAPT, (RAVEN2), RAVIN, RAVISH; EREPSIN, (SUBREPTION), SURREPTITIOUS, Latin- rapere, to seize, NO MORE DATA [Pokorny rep- 865] homiletics*
~erepsin- (mutable: nōmen, nōmin) an enzyme complex found in intestinal and pancreatic juices that functions in the breakdown of polypeptides into amino acids, Latin ēripere, to snatch away [ē-, ex-, ex- (see eghs- carnallite*) + rapere, to seize] + (P)EPSIN, see root pekw- silvertip*

The digestive root pekw-, also the grizzly bear, according to Pokorny, is described as "to cook", with words like pepsin, but also to "ripen" as the pumpkin.

~rapacious- (adjective: to add to : ad-, ad- + iacere, to throw) taking by force, plundering; greedy; ravenous; voracious; subsisting on live prey, from Latin rapāx, rapāc-, from rapere, to seize

~rape- (mutable: nōmen, nōmin) rape1: the crime of forcing another person to submit to sexual activity, especially sexual intercourse; seizing or carrying off by force; abduction; abusive or improper treatment; violation; (transitives) plunder or pillage of the body or mind, or that which sustains a healthy life; Middle English, from rapen, to rape, from Old French raper, to abduct, from Latin rapere, to seize; rape2: ( Brassica napus ) European plant of the mustard family grown as fodder and for its seed that yields a valuable oil, also called colza, oil-seed rape; Middle English, from Old French, from Latin rāpa, turnip; rape3: the refuse of grapes left after the extraction of the juice in winemaking, French râpe, grape stalk, from Old French, from rasper, to scrape, see RASP

~rapid- (adjective: to add to : ad-, ad- + iacere, to throw) moving, acting, or occurring with great speed; swift; fast; an extremely fast moving part of a river caused by a steep decent in a riverbed; often used in plural; Latin rapidus, from rapere, to seize

~rapine- (mutable: nōmen, nōmin) forcible seizure of another's property; plunder, Middle English, from Old French, from Latin rapīna, to seize

~rapt- (mutable module: verbum, word) past participle of rap2, (sense 1); deeply moved or delighted; enraptured: rapt admiration; deeply absorbed; engrossed: rapt in thought; Middle English, carried away, from Latin raptus, past participle of rapere, to seize

Rap2, a module back-formation of rapt, while also being past tense is a bit transitive, as the nōmen rap3, defined as the "least bit", and it may be that some of the word history provided can help. The first module rap1 is the one that seems to take the blame, while the last nōmen rap4, is the discussion, but this comes from the rhythm from the first made. Rap3, comes from the counterfeit halfpenny. The first rap is built off the rappen, and this also comes in the form of rapen, which seems to have more to do with rhythm than anything else. The following quote provides no source information from the word history in reference to rape1.

"It could mean "to fix or set a certain time" ("The tyme he wild [would] not rape") or "to carry off somebody to heaven from earth" ("the visions of seynt poul wan [when] he was rapt in to paradys").

~ravin- (mutable: nōmen, nōmin) voracity; rapaciousness; something taken as prey; the act or practice of preying, Middle English ravin, raven, from Old French ravine, rapine, from Latin rapīna, from rapere, to seize

~ravish- (mutable module: verbum, word) to seize and carry away by force; to rape; violate; overwhelm with fear of physical harm; enrapture, Middle English ravisshen, from Old French ravir, raviss-, from Vulgar Latin *rapīre, from Latin rapere, to seize

It seems the use of this module is overlaying other emotions, and being labeled as such, or to overwhelm a general reference to "emotions" of which include thousands of feelings, many associated with knowledge and joy, not really surfacing, as this also emphasizes the ravine, a place where the water of life has eroded the earth at maximum level, or that of an analogy of spiritual abuse related to homiletics.

~surreptitious- (adjective: to add to : ad-, ad- + iacere, to throw) obtained, done, or made by clandestine or stealthy means; acting with or marked by stealth; secret; Middle English, from Latin surreptīcius, from surreptus, past participle of surripere, to take away secretly : sub-, secretly; see SUB- + rapere, to seize

The subreption is a calculated move to conceal the facts while using this maneuver to to draw an inference that is invalid as presented. One can also note the palindrome of the root itself, and this begins the program. per-1- planck's constant (30)


Emerald- fixed-primer- brilliant green to grass-green transparent variety of beryl of strong yellowish green, Middle English emeraude, from Old French, from Medieval Latin esmeralda, esmeraldus, from Latin smaragdus, from Greek smargdos [ref: primrose, primavera1, per-1- planck's constant (30)
 
Herbs this chapter: calamondin, calamus root, coltsfoot, blackberry lily

© 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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