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Heat
~ Love
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© unknown
Follow the sacred stone journey through
the sun in the Fifth House as
The Lion prepares the Virgo.
This journey will end
in
Aquarius,
and the
perverse and rebellious Uranus,
and
then,
you'll be ready to go again,
"scissors?", the
beast says. |
In search of - The Sapient Stone Language
  
Chapter Thirty Four:
Gracie and George's
patronizing swivel pincers
|
|
Keywords: split stick,
die-hard, energy transmission, resistance is a tool, native
estuary, splitting two pulpits, paternoster, beauty spot,
honeyeater, featherless head, El Dorado, hollow out the end,
tunnel buried in a channel,
indigo-blue, embryonic mesoderm, show mercy, sculptor's
chisel, rosy face |
|
"The setting up of
this Maypole was a lamentable spectacle to the precise
separatists that lived at New Plymouth." (Thomas Morton
- AHD) |
|
Get your suits on, we're coming in a warp speed under the
bridge, and we've got a payload. Two fat looking antimonies have
been dropped off in this chapter, and hopefully, the janitor
will not have to make too many visits over here. Both Havelocks
and Indent may take the show, but take a look at Die-hard to
begin your journey, as we sit in the middle of Summer, and the
thunder has certainly been playing music in the night. To flavor
your journey, Gracie is the feminine psyche and George is the
masculine.
Part one: Die-hard
|
 |
2-heat-hot-et-kai-
heat, Extended form *kaid-, Old English- hāt,
hot, Germanic- *haitaz; Old English- hætu,
heat, Germanic- *haitī, die-hard*, diencephalon*
(photo © unknown) |
~heat-
Physics: energy transmission and usage: 1) conduction-
transmission where the electric charge is
primary
(penetration inclusive of solids,
splitting atoms), 2) convection-
transmission where flow or harmony between elements is
primary, 3) radiant- transmission of light energy (free);
radiation- transmission of nuclear decay by altering the
energy of atoms and their relationship to the construction
of molecules (not free); sensation of these interactions shared with
the existing atmosphere; a moment in time when extra effort
is applied to catch those who break laws that cause harm to
innocent people; becoming overexcited intellectually and/or
emotionally; an active stage where life exists, Middle
English hete, from Old English hætu,
[ref: heat capacity- an amount measured where
this energy is increased in temperature of one mole
or one gram of a substance by one degree Celsius without
change of phase; mole- element matching to carbon 12 in
amount of any of the particles, atoms, ions, molecules, and weighing
0.012 kilograms, also called a gram molecule (6.0225 X 1023,
Avogadro's number)]
Comment: Avogadro's law
is a hypothesis used where (volume-pressure) are perceived
at a specific temperature (matching this law) to be
identical in density (volume, Symbol N, number of
molecules), when duplicated as calculated by other
Physicists. This may be evident in the use of petroleum
deposits which earth uses to manufacture organic compounds,
but is removed and burned.
~hot- heat that has reached a level that is considered
higher than one intends, or creates for oneself; burning
sensation; spice; sexual and/or mental arousal; agitation;
friction; resistance between two (spaces, bodies, psyches)
of relative motion; Middle English, from Old English hāt,
note: slang's omitted, see
comments on friction.
[ref: relativism-
Philosophy: a theory that
conceptions of truth and moral are not absolute, but
are at the same time relative to the persons or groups
holding them by means of interpretation, and integration of
existing knowledge which may in fact be complete nonsense,
moving the measuring stick so that truth or morality may be
perceived falsely, or at a level so primitive, any knowledge
construction (truth) is resisted.] [ref:
relativity- Philosophy:
existence dependent solely on relation
to a thinking mind (constant); a form of
dependence often reversed as independence but masked as
both. It is also said that existence or significance of one
entity is solely dependent on
that of another, but in general, this should only be applied
to the earth and sun
relationship. From there down, it gets foggy.]It
looks like friction is a great word if you're a trouble
maker, but did everyone just go crazy, as two objects can
also tickle each other, and that would have nothing
to do with heat necessarily. Unfortunately, we have words
that when spoken create friction in the way they sound
called fricatives, such as the letter f or s, but of course
these sounds have been expanded. Also, it seems the word
friction is nested in a centerfold section of the diction
that is indeed hot, for example.
|
| In sequence, we go from
friction (to rub making sure not to
tickle), to Friday (frige, Frigg, no rubbing,
just friezing), then fried
(back to the fryer) and
friend (be happy). So, we most certainly have
implants. First, it seems fried may only be an attachment to
Alfred Hermann Fried (1864-1921) who won the Nobel Peace
Prize in 1911. He was a pacifist. That would not be
appreciated by the programmers, so we have an amazing
anomaly in Milton Friedman hanging out in the closet for
theories of calamity. The following are non-rooted implants:
frican deau, fricassee, fricative,
friction, friction clutch, friction drive, friction match,
and friction tape. In the middle of this set of
sequenced implants we have Henry Clay Frick (1849-1919), who
was an industrialist who amassed a fortune in the steel
industry. We also have Betty Naomi Friedan who wrote The
Feminine Mystique (1963) and founded the National
Organization for Women (1966). In our sciences, resistance
is a tool built up from the discovering of Coulombs
Law and other Hertz's in the fog. It just seems borg.
(Frieze- photo right: copyright AHD-3E p727) |
 |
To quickly sum up this group, Pokorny has sent us to page
519 where you can die, die-hard, or be a dielectric
(non-conductor) of the bull shit fed to us by propagandists.
This may indeed have relations to the between-brain
that houses the thalamus and hypothalamus, where men fight
weird battles as seen in the frieze where one is part
animal, and I'm not sure what the other one is doing with it. |
Part two: Havelocks
|
 |
15-allopatric-eupatrid-expatriate-father-padre-pater-paternal-patriarch
-patrician-patrimony-patriot-patron-père-perpetrate-sympatric-et-peter-
Old English fæder, father?,
Germanic- *fadar, pater, perpetrate, Latin
pater, father, eupatrid,
sympatric, Greek- patēr,
father, NO MORE DATA, havelocks* |
~allopatric- occurring in a set of sequenced
events where an organism has migrated to a position
where it is no longer suited to bread with inhabitants;
(geo-location- see geophyte and phyte for comparisons);
Greek allos, other : Greek patra, fatherland,
also see [German Allopathie : Greek allos,
other + Greek patheia, suffering]
Comment: The definitions of
allopatric and sympatric are a bit twisted in meaning, and
extremely cleverly designed. They have been revised. It is
the allopatric state we are currently in, and that is a
warning sign that rests with the allometry of the
psychopaths who twist our world into snake soup. They
transplanted their reign upon the American heritage of the
native people, and it was considered all-or-none, as
evidence from the spread of the disease and advancement to
the allopatric state.
~eupatrid-
those considered members of an hereditary
aristocracy of ancient Athens,
Greek eupatridēs : eu-,
eu- + patēr, patr-, father + idēs,
patronymic suffix?
Comment: That doesn't
add up, as the meaning of idēs is subtly
redirected in your mind, not so fast. This word has many
rabbit trails attached to it, the first being Idus,
or a sort of jumping board for the ancient Zodiac which has
been upgraded to a new zoon or Zion mode. See comments after
section.
~expatriate-
to banish; repel; deport; send into
exile; from earth but not from earth; an attempt to
find peace; Middle English expatriāre,
expatriārt- :
Latin ex-, ex- + Latin patria, native land
(from patrius, paternal, from pater, father
Comment: I ask the simple
question. Our world wants free trade which is only a lie,
but at the same time we do not want a free world? Only an
greedy idiot would come up with that idea. In essence, the
analogy to the word father is directly associated
with the native estuary, and nothing to do with men.
~father- that of the male counterpart in mammals;
god;
prototype; attributed to paternity,
parenting; Middle
English fader, from Old English fæder,
Word history notes: See gerundive, expressing
the notion of fitness or obligation, deriving a noun from a
verb; the word father is in direct competition with the
oldest sense of beget according to the AHD, but
unfortunately, the word group that beget belongs to
doesn't have any clout as having any value, in fact, it was
the worst group so far out of
86 of about 500.
From last chapter:
ghend-
craven (33)
~beget- basic
implant,
to father, sire; causing an existence of sorts; procure
(sexual favoring): Violence begets more violence;
Middle English biyeten, bigeten,
from Old English begetan
This may be more associated with setting up cross
breading words near others that have great value such as
begin or be, by attaching the slang overload
get. At any rate, it
seems malevolently derived. And with words like
siren, which is the sea
nymph that lured mariners to their death, sire is
quite rigid and even claiming to be superior. Well, any
women would clear that up. The word sire is
also part of the sen- root which is routed straight
to imposter, or better implosion.
~padre-
implant, military chaplain; parson; associated with
aristocracy; Spanish, Italian, or Portuguese, all from Latin
pater, patr, father
Comment: This word is nested
with the patty field,
which is like an estuary, and indeed men do attempt to help
other men in battle, as would be expected. Unfortunately,
today, a majority of men come home from battle as a
vegetable, and nothing a chaplain says will make any
difference. But padre has more problems, as the word
pad supposedly has no origin, or at least the primary. And there
is paedomorphism which is someone who carries forward
juvenile characteristics, such as the current crop of sound
biters. And padre has a polka partner padouk
which is also padauk, which is also amboyna,
or the wood of this Burmese tree which grows in a
subtropical southeastern Asian climate, but it is also part
of another word ambo, which is
splitting two
pulpits (pupils) with something referred to as raised edges.
That might be associated with ambsace, or the
double aces, and ambry
is linked to arm2, of which I have already tied to violence
as
~arm2-
firearm;
strangely ambry is supposed to be a place for keeping
sacred vessels. That's not a good sign, as we have found
that these vessels are a reference for our soul and psyche.
~pater- basic
British implant; father, no more data
Comment: The word pater
begins with pat which sits near pasture land,
as comparable to the slaughter of the Tehuelche by British
settlers in South America, and their illusory plateau of
gold on their own plate. There also seems to be a male carry
over using pat to create patent, with pater resting in the
middle of the nest.
~paternal-
paternalism: overbearing in
fatherly control of needs by removing rights or
responsibility; subordination; Middle English, from Old
French, from Late Latin paternālis, from Latin
paternus, from pater, father, (trouble list:
pater, paterfamilias, paternal,
paternalism, paternity, paternity leave, paternity test)
Comment: Well, again it is
unfortunate that this word leads to nothing, and you begin
to see why when you take a look at paternoster which is
rooted to nes-2; Old English
ūser, and Germanic *unsara-, which pokes right to
genus, that is implying origin, but is not the complete
origin, as without the womb, you're already beat. And also
why is it that parents (two people) must be referred to as a
patented relationship? This is also closely dragging across
patina, which is rooted with pete-, which
pokes straight to
the word hardness. So the hard news is, refer to harmony.
There is even more, we have Patos, or Lagoa dos, which is
another lagoon in southeast Brazil. And the real meaning of
pad is Middle Dutch and is rooted with the
word path, see pent-; way, path,
and this is in relation to life, not where life came from.
The noster seems to trace back to nostalgia, which is rooted
with nes-1, and the harness, which seems to be connected
with the gills (water intake) or possibly the gimbal.
~patriarch-
(implanted use;
revision); what is perceived as
a head or referred to as Sanhedrin, by which is divided into
three parts, 1) the delphinium or dolphin; 2) the sword lily
or wild iris; 3) the iris of the eye; rainbow; these spring
from the blood of the Hyacinthus; or supposedly the one who is not a
hybrid, Middle English patriarche, from Old French, from
Late Latin patriarcha, from Greek patriarkhēs : patria,
lineage + arkhēs, -arch,
note: the
dictionary attempted to place pater between these
meanings, and did a poor job of hiding the truth. This is
principally about attuning knowledge, which is about
measurements, not directly attached to men as they wish.
[references: Sanhedrin- root
sed-; synizesis, solium, seat,
throne; hyacinth*; also seaware- root wei-; inotropic,
mimbers: actually traced to vim which is
weiæ-
megapolis (28)]
[study reference: sinew,
sine wave, sine, sine cure, single: sem-1]
~patrician-
a member of aristocracy; pathocracy
carried forward in classification and self-worth; Medieval
ruling class known to be brutal warmongers; ancient Roman
empire republic; superfluous nobility, Middle English
patricion, from Old French patricien, from Latin
patricius, from patrēs (cōnscrīptī),
enrolled fathers, senators, plural of pater, patr-
~patrimony-
the extension of power through heredity; inheritance often
associated with religious organizations; endowment; legacy
through masculine legs; Middle English, from Old French
patrimoine, from Latin patrimōnium, from pater,
patr-, father
~patriot-
those who link their power through these male associations
only; French patriote, from Old French,
compatriat, from Late
Latin patriōta, from Greek patriōtēs, from
patrios, of one's fathers, from patēr, patr-,
father
Comment: the word
compatriat is another
creation for this program that has chosen the com-
prefix, which is rooted to kom-, and
attempting to represent a type of unity, but it seems more
related to the word cum than country, of which
both are a part of the kom- root. It is also
referred to as a type of handiwork between buddies of power
who seem to call out to each other in some weird ritual related to
the X chromosome and the yclepe.
~patron-
nobility favors; one who
participates in community; slaves who
have been freed but aren't really free;
one who captains a ship specifically a
barge which moves the product for the association made;
one who does not kneed the associations as a lion, Middle
English, from Old French, from Medieval Latin patrōnus,
[ref: benefaction versus
rarefaction]
~père-
implant, a nominal designation between father and
son: Dumas père primarily
wrote novels, while dramas occupied Dumas fils; title
for Roman imperialism otherwise known as priest; French,
from Old French pedre,
from Latin pater
Comment: please note that
perdition is nested with père where one's soul
is stolen, and the perdu, who is the soldier who
never returns.
~perpetrate-
implant tag for perpendicular; see root (s)pen-
Comment: If you want to
be responsible, be responsible. You don't need to tie this
responsibility to the male genus line, for if you do, you're
just another compatriat which is a weird creation of sorts.
The party goings on in the (s)pen- (spinner
group) is quite thick, so will have to dig that one out
soon.
~sympatric-
occurring in a set of sequenced events where an organism
has not migrated to a position where it is no longer
suited to bread with inhabitantsEupatrid is nested in one of the strangest
areas that I have encountered so far in the dictionary. It
is completely surrounded with rooted words, such as the
euphemistic eupeptic which states you'll be
digestively happy, and the euonymus, a kind of
tree that thinks it grows, and of course, euphony
which sounds agreeable along with euphoria, and not least or
last the eunuch which is thought to be someone
who has no balls, but spends a lot of time in school. If
that wasn't enough fun, then take a look at what I found
connected to the Ides of March, May, July, and October of
which is even stranger. It goes like this. There is this
cusp thing, similar to the one in the film 2001 Space
Odyssey that Stanley keeps shinning over the top of a 4 X 9
block. Anyway, there are four cardinal signs, but when
correlating the strange dates associated with the word Ides,
and you compare them to the navigator-on, you see a very
strange thing happening. The dates presented in the
definitions are around the 13th to 15th of each designated
month, but it is the four that seem to be the key marker for
some kind of ritual or something related to ancient
practices. So here is the matching layout.
1. First cusp ending March 20 (approximately 7 days
after, not before); Pisces > Aries
2. Second cusp ending May 21 (approximately 7 days after,
not before): Taurus > Gemini
3. Third cusp ending July 22 (approximately 7 days after,
not before); Cancer > Leo
4. Fourth cusp ending October 23 (approximately 7 days, not
before); Libra > Scorpio
Cancer and Libra are cardinal signs, but the others are
not, and Pisces and Taurus sit at the bottom of the
navigator-on, and on opposite ends, while the cardinal signs
are all on one side. I find this intriguing and will follow
the trail. This monthly timing also seems to be the period
arranged between the first quarter and third quarter of the
moon's cycle, with the designed dates landing nearer the
full moon. This may associated the story of flying orbs or
something that passed over the moon during this period, but
it would also occur every month, so more is needed on this
topic.
As far as the following goes, I seem to feel these needed
attachment, not necessarily as fact, but as a way to brings
key concepts together in order to evaluate where ideas
really do belong in this methodology of mythologies, and as
it stood, it was a mess.
~patriarch-
(implanted use;
revision); what is perceived as
a head or referred to as Sanhedrin, by which is divided into
three parts, 1) the delphinium or dolphin; 2) the sword lily
or wild iris; 3) the iris of the eye; rainbow; these spring
from the blood of the Hyacinthus.
---
The following group may touch a few fires, and one should
consider that the word brother is a word
brought forward by religions designating a (brethren)
relationship to promote an order whether truthful or not. It
is perfectly normal for two men to have a companionship in
any manner, but it is not normal when those men use the
instinctive power that is a gift that males possess to rule
others. Try to laugh your way through this one, it helps.
|
Part three: Beauty Spot
|
 |
9-brother-bully-confrere-fra-fraternal-fratricide-friar-pal-phraty-et-bhrāter-
brother, male agnate, Old English brōther, brother,
Middle Dutch broeder, bully, sourced Germanic *brōthar
(brōthor); FRA,
FRATERNAL, FRIAR, CONFRERE, FRATRICIDE, Latin- frāter,
brother, Greek- phratēr, phratry, fellow
member of a clan, PAL, from Sanskrit bhrātā, bhrātār-,
brother, beauty spot*, assistant beaker*, Thor* |
~brother-
the second son, or that of another of same parents; sharing
ancestral allegiance, character, or fraternal purpose;
kinsman; brethren, such as a
corporation or institution ranked by fractioning class;
"A station that ...relies on corporate contributions
or advertising to survive runs the risk of becoming
virtually indistinguishable from its brethren" (W.
John Moore - AHD); member of men's religious ordering; lay
member; a Christian? Middle English, from Old English (brōthor)
[ref: polka partner
brothel- house of
prostitution: his mind had become the brothel of his
sword.]
~bully-
habitually cruel to weaker people; ruffian; thug;
intimidator; aggressiveness based on disordered mendicant:
the fighting escalated aggressively as the declaration
crumbled; persuasion; possibly from Middle Dutch
boele, sweetheart, probably
alteration of broeder, brother
Comment: The reference to sweetheart may be associated with
religious practices hidden behind the veil of available open
knowledge. There is also a connection to the word Boer, which is a
name for peasant, root bheuæ-; future, neighbor,
beam,
husband, phyle, neophyte, physics; banneret1 or banneret2*
~confrere-
a fellow member of a fraternity or corporate profession; colleague,
Middle English, from Old French, from Medieval Latin
cōnfrāter : Latin com-, com- + Latin brother,
see root kom-
~fra-
Roman Catholic Church; title for Italian monk or friar,
brother; Italian, short for frate, brother, from
Latin frāter [ref:
fraction- fracture, see root bhreg-;
infringe versus outfringe; poor tree growth; bed of roses**]
~fraternal-
comrade ring between men who are not actually brothers in
most cases; Biology: of, related to, or being a twin
developed from two separately fertilized ova; dizygotic,
Middle English, from Old French fraternel, from
Medieval Latin frāternālis, from Latin frāternus,
frāter, brother
Comment: I am currently
trailing this back to the word distaff, which seems
very closely associated with the word distance which
is the massive root sta- of which is in
eyesight.
~fratricide-
the killing of a brother or sister; killer; murderer; Middle
English, from Old French, from Latin frātricīdium and
frātricīda : frāter, frātr-, brother +
cīdium and -cīda, -cide, [ref:
-cide, suffix,
act of killing, see root below: kaæ-id-;
circumcise; sculpture's
chisel; indention*]
~friar-
a member of usually a mendicant Roman Catholic ordering,
Middle English, frere, from Old French, from Latin
frāter, brother, [ref: friarbird-
honeyeater with a partially naked, featherless head of
the genus Philemon of Australia and relative adjacent
regions; leatherhead; scull dogs*
Comment: We have crept back up
on the implant list that began with
frican deau with only three words left between
this one and frican deau which are friar's
lantern, friary, and fribble. The friar's lantern is
actually the ignis fatuus which is basically swamp
gas or rotting matter from Latin ignis, fire, and
Latin fatuus, foolish.
And it seems the friary which is supposedly a
monastery is where friar's fribble their time away with a
word that has no origin.
~pal- a
friend; associate; Romany phral,
phal; akin to
Sanskrit bhrātā; Word History:
Pal originates from around the 17th century
brought forward from the Indic Gypsies from Romany which was
between Iran and India. It was both Romany phal
(England) and phral (Europe). There is also an
association with the word pale which relates to a
dark band upon a vertical escutcheon from the Old French
pal which shows a contradiction in etymological
referencing. The word pale has two roots, pag-;
pacific, pacify, peace; and
also pel-1-;
Latin columbus, ringdove, gray-bird, Pelops, dark +
ōps, eye; see
okw-
~phraty-
a kinship group constituting an intermediate division
in the primitive structure of the Hellenic tribe (Greek)
or phyle
(city-state, bheuæ-), consisting of
several patrilinear clans, and
surviving in classical times as a territorial subdivision
of the political and military
organizations of the Athenian state; an exogamous
subdivision of the tribe, constituting two or more related
clans, Greek phratria, from phratēr, phratr-, fellow member
(person) of a clan, [ref: hell-for-leather
tek- compare phreatic root bhreu- with
frenetic root gwhren-] |
|
From chapter 28
~Thor-
Mythology: Norse god of thunder, Old Norse Thōrr;
(s)tenæ-
Mendel's Law (28)
~thunder-
the rumbling sound produced from rapidly moving air moving
outward from an electrical discharge; a sound that resembles or
suggests thunder; express loudly or violently; roar; Middle
English, from Old English thunor
Mendel's Law
is also known as the law of segregation where homologous
chromosomes segregate (as pairs) to specific locations, and a
secondary principle believed where they do this independently.
This may be related to the meiosis in our psyches as well. [research:
Fourierism, Fourier series in relation to
phalanstery, this seems one original source of pal]
note: pale is also what is considered white in loose terms,
as there is no such thing as white or black. There seems
quite a bit to check off here. Keep watching your vessels as
we enter into a big ship to sinc your hardware. |
Part four: El Dorado2
revised 2008SEPT18
18-accumulate-cave-cavern-cavetto-cavity-celiac-church-codeine-coel-coelom
-concave-cumulate-cumulus-cyma-enciente1-excavate-kyrie-pseudocyesis-et
-keuæ-
to swell, vault, hole, O-grade form *kouæ-, Basic
form *kouæ- becoming *kaw-, CAVE, CAVERN,
CAVETTO, CAVITY, CONCAVE, EXCAVATE, Latin- cavus, hollow,
Suffixed form *kow-ilo-(-CELE2), CELIAC, -COEL,
COELOM, Greek- koilos, hollow, Suffixed
lengthened-grade from *kōw-o-, CODEINE, Greek-
kōos, hollow place, cavity; Zero-grade form *kū-
(< *kuæ-), Suffixed shortened form *ku-m-olo,
CUMULATE, CUMULUS, ACCUMULATE, Latin cumulus, heap,
mass; Basic form *kū-, suffixed form *kū-ro,
"swollen" strong, powerful; CHURCH, (KIRK),
KYRIE, Greek
kurios (vocative kurie), master, lord; suffixed
form *kuw-eyo-, CYMA, Greek- kuein,
to swell, and derivative kuma (< *kū-mn), "a
swelling", wave, suffixed form *en-kū-yo- (*en, in,
see en-) ENCEINTE1, Latin inciēns, pregnant, El Dorado2**,
(enciente2
- kenk-) |
~accumulate-
gather or pile up, amass; to mount up, increase; Latin
accumulāre, accumulāt-
: ad-, ad- + cummulāre, to pile up (from
cummulus, heap, [ note:
gathering is not synonymous with accumulation as stated, as
there would be forms of gathering that did not pile up, or
amass a heap that are strictly associated with physicalism;
ghedh-
corymbe (32)]
~cave-
Geography: a hollow or natural passage under or into the
earth with an opening to the surface; cave in rock*;
Phrenology: to dig or hollow out; cause to collapse or
yield; crumble or smash; give up all opposition; Middle
English, from Old French, from Latin cava, from
neuter plural of cavus, hollow
Comment: Immediate caveat
filler- It is uncertain as to why we as a language speaking
society would call a hole in a rock that is undoubted
sturdy, also something that is collapsing, other than to
say, someone is attempting to bend your spoon and probably
sell you insurance for it.
[sound keys: cave-in,
how?, cave just cave, oh, it is a caveat emptor, empty cave]
Comment2: The word
caveat emptor is an
implant, as the derivative
roots don't match: Latin cavēre, let him beware (or
to beware) +
emptor, empty (not buyer); there is no link to
the word buyer as it has been inserted into the text,
and in sense, it must be related to the mind warp occurring
related to the caverns created for us and delivered through
the system now present.
~cavern-
a large underground chamber, as in a cave; a geographical
area that is perceived as enclosed;
to hollow out the end; Middle English caverne,
from Old French, from Latin caverna, from cavus,
hollow [ref: fear of open spaces? agoraphobia
versus pseudocyesis: pregnant-like swelling, and also
claustrophobia: uncomfortable; enclosed place;
confined]
~cavetto-
a concave molding with a (cross-section)
that approximates a quarter circle, Italian diminutive of
cavo, hollow, from Latin cavis [
note: perception of
perpendicular must be accomplished inside the mind in
relation to the construction of the profile to help prevent
enclosure, more on this topic below]
Comment: The cavetto is often referred to as (cove molding)
which seems marked by the cavellite or indigo-blue
glimmering mineral which rests on top of two strange birds,
one is a coven (13 witches), and one is a covenant
which is a (binding agreement) but it is also a (bargain).
Cove1 is the shoreline of the sea, but it is also the curved
side of the wall inside a cave in representation (imagine)
called a coving, Old English, cofa; Cove2 is
from Romany for kova,
man, Does any of this make sense?
~cavity-
a hollow hole; hollow area within the area of the body
somewhere: sinus; a small hole; pitted tooth related
to caries, French cavité,
from Late Latin cavitās, from Latin cavis
~celiac-
of or related to the abdomen (cave wall) or abdominal
cavity, Latin coeliacus, from Greek
koiliakos, from koilia, abdomen, from koilos,
hollow
~church-
observant of decorum; propriety;
divination (moving the essence out from the body;
dying); Middle English chirche, from Old English
cirice, ultimately from Medieval Greek
kurikon,
from Late Greek kuriakon (dōma),
the Lord's (house), from Greek kuriakos, of the lord,
from kurios, lord, [ref:
curious- Old French curios, from Latin
cūriōsus, careful, inquisitive, from cūra,
care, see cure; note:
this definition has been revised somewhat to represent more
the truth in relation to what this word may actually mean.
It seems related to the human body, and the bodies of those
creatures who have perception and are alive, rather than a
fancy piece of wood. The curiosity needs to remained focused
outward, which seems to bring the essence in versus the
reverse method of destruction. Since this word is highly
controversial, and thoroughly misused, it can never really
be useful, but only cause more people to enter into their
own minds and throw away curiosity.
Comment and history: The word
pal was originally described in the dictionary with
an implanted word called chum
which also rests on one side of the word church, and
on the other side we have churn, which is basically
what church means if you combine these two feelings. Churn
also has a trail, as it is actually Old English cyrrin,
which is similar to cyrenaic which is self
indulgence; and as in the Aristippus of Cyrene it also
contains the controversial word prudence which is
from prude, and from the earliest record was
preudomme, "a man of experience and integrity" but was
also Old French prode femme, "wise woman", so we have
a bit of usefulness, profit, wisdom, and integrity, but in
spite of all this, things did not turn out that well.
~codeine-
an alkaloid narcotic (torpor), C16H21NO3,
derived from opium (unripe pods) or morphine
and used as a cough suppressant, analgesic, and hypnotic,
French codéine : Greek
kōdeia, poppy head + -ine,
alkaloid, from kōos, cavity,
note: in psyche terms, the
cavity may be in your head, but also may be in your mouth.
As evidenced by the pawning of this drug out of millions of
dental offices across the world, and its attack on the
abdomen and who knows what else the use of such drugs do to
the body over time. Warning: Torpor- insensibility; state of
hibernation; root ster-1-; strutting ahead of the stern*,
layaway plan*
~coel-
or -coele or -cele; suffix, chamber,
cavity: blastocoel, New Latin -coela, from
Greek koilos, hollow
~coelom-
the cavity within the body of all animals higher than the
coelenterates and certain primitive worms, formed by the
splitting of the embryonic mesoderm into two layers. In
mammals it forms the peritoneal, pleural, and pericardial
cavities, also called body cavity. German Koelom,
from Greek koilōma,
cavity, from koilos, hollow
Comment: This may be associated
with moving the black boxes out of the center hole so to
speak as presented in the striped pale insignia, as there
are many other words where the prefix co- has been
attached in relation to the presence of two parts. The root
group del-1 is routed straight to the black box, as in
analogy of longitude, or possibly the creation of a horizon
in the psyche that is destructive. Another analogy might be
the Columbus debauchery where the entity is constantly
seeking to creep over the edge. There is also the
associations with such as tunnel vision, there is
even a chunnel which is tunnel buried in a channel.
~concave-
what is seen as curved like the inner surface of a sphere;
the perception of sight as seen by the observer standing on
the surface of the planet with optimal magnification; Middle
English, from Latin concavus : com-, intensive
prefix, (together, see root kom-) com- +
cavus, hollow
Comment: the act of seeing is
also (concealing) as you cannot see past the sky, or into
the atom, and this power is part of the science of
understanding the double lens, similar to )(, where focus,
sensitivity, mirrors, can be modified to see into the dark
regions of space or inside the cells.
~cumulate-
heaping up; accumulation; amassed, Latin cumulāre,
cumalāt-, from cumulus, heap
~cumulus- a dense, mass of (water/air) appearing white with
a flat-base and multiple swelling tops which is distinctive
in outline, and formed through unstable thermal air masses
that ascend; a pile, mound, or heap, Latin heap [ref:
cumulonimbus- (hazy outline; glaciations; and nimbus-
root nebh-]
~cyma-
Architecture: a molding for a cornice such as (crown
molding or bed molding) having a partly concave and partly
convex curve in profile, used especially in classical
genres, also called cymatium, Greek kuma,
wave, cyma, from kuein, to swell
|
~enciente1-
enciente1: carrying an unborn child; pregnant,
from Old French, possibly from Medieval Latin incincta,
without a girdle (in-, not; see IN-1 + Latin cincta,
feminine past participle of cingere, to gird (see
kenk-) by folk etymology from Latin inciēns,
pregnant; enciente2:
rooted to only kenk-; a type of structuring
that surrounds enciente1, or the castle needing
fortification, French, from Late Latin incincta, from
past participle of incingere, to surround closely :
Latin in-, see IN-2 + Latin cingere, to gird
[ref: IN-1; NOT; IN-2;
into, within]
Comment: This should be simple. Enciente1 is the
female (feminine) who contains
enciente2 which represents the well surrounding
the baby, often seen as a canal filled with water. One holds
a special essence in the creation, and one is the house for
that creation, and this can be quite analogist to the
universe. The root group kenk- (cincture)
leads to another by way of nave dhreu-; which
is drizzle, and dreary. These cinching concepts may be
confused with newer extensions as the belt.
~excavate-
1) digging in; scoping; removing
earth; 2) hollowing out; making a hole; (warning
dilatation);
birth, Latin excavāre,
excavāt-, to hollow out : ex-, ex- + cavāre,
to hollow (from cavus, hollow)
Comment: the prefix ex-
basically means out of, although this root has not
been finished, eghs-; exotic, external, extra,
out of, *iz, carnal knowledge*]
~kyrie-
(revision) that which is
manifested has power, and it is to ask mercy for this power
and that which it manifests as all is one, and little by
little everything is amassed (knowledge), so if one lies,
the well cannot be dug out, and no praying will help as the
father is unable to hear you as you have removed the
knowledge that may allow this specific access. Late Latin,
from Greek kurie, eleēson,
Lord, have mercy : Kurie, vocative of kurios,
lord, master + eleēson, aorist imperative of elein,
to show mercy (from eleos, mercy)
~pseudocyesis-
psychosomatic (psychopathic orientated) changes
(physiological) in the body, such as simulating pregnancy,
weight gain, amenorrhea, imaginings of sorrow, etc.,
manifested without conception, sometimes referred to as
pseudopregnancy; pseudo + New Latin cyēsis,
pregnancy (from Greek kuēsis, from kuein,
to swell)
Comment: the word amenorrhea
is rooted with (mē-2-
Isis (21)) and is
supposedly the suppression of menstruation, but this would
coordinate with the system of forcing people into cyclic
behaviors that mismatch the earth forces, such as the moon,
and all these forces, such as over eating and others
contribute to the unbalance of the entity in conjunction with
the environmental universe.El
Dorado2 is described as the inordinate one, (not
in order); and El Dorado1,
is a imaginary city in an unknown new world, of which is the
well in which we are born in my consensus of analogy.
Columbus and other imaginings have always sought the other
side of the rainbow instead of the end, and one must remove
the horizon, and have the opportune to live a life. This
curiosity is used in the physical sense as
primary when it seems meant for another nave. It now spreads
out attempting to fulfill itself so that it may die to be
free, when this has no end.
Indi-Notes: This may seem odd, but
Cayuse is native north American people, and it is also an
Indian pony as a regional entry. It is uncertain if this is
connected to the dialect of the Nez Perce but the
connotation left from that type of usage is quite negative.
The word Nez Perce in French is nez, nose + percé,
past participle of percer, to pierce. In the next
group, you will need this attribute, as this group is worth
many visits, and also is considered an antimony as the data
is not constructed properly. |
Part five: Indent
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 |
16-abscise-caelum-caesura-cestus2-cetus-cement-chisel-cide-circumcise
-concise-decide-excise-incise-precise-recision-scissors-et-kaæ-id-
to strike, Latin caedere, to cut, strike, caelum,
Latin- caelum (? < *caedum), sculptor's chisel,
NO MORE DATA, indent*,
indelicate* (cestus1
- kent-) |
~abscise-
to cut off, remove; shed by abscision, Latin
abscindere, absciss- : ab-1, away + caedere,
to cut; also abscisic acid- plant hormone C15H20O4
involved in the abscission of leaves, flowers, and fruits,
and the dormancy of the buds and seeds; also abscissa-
Symbol X: position or point parallel to a perpendicular
Y-axis in a plane Cartesian coordinate system, New Latin (linea)
abscissa (line) cut off, from Latin abscissus, past
participle of abscindere, to abscise [ref:
ab-, prefix, root apo-;
awkward, impose, turned backward; alphabet**]
Comment: Abscise is surrounded
with roots that tell a strange story. First, we have
abscond,
dhē-
three fates (12), and we also have
absent root es-, which
includes sin, and present, but routes straight to a page
where Christmas seems primary. And we also have the word
abscess which is by far the strangest. It seems to trace
back to the (s)keu- group which has been in quarantined for
awhile. The root group ked- of which it is a part of, does
not have any other words similar to it, which is odd. It
contains words like necessary, and leads to thinking of
unavoidable or the inevitable which has nothing to do with
an abscess.
~Caelum-
a constellation in the Southern Hemisphere near Columba and
Eridanus, Latin caelum, sculptor's chisel, [ref:
caduceus- insignia for double serpent staff, [ref:
caducous- root kad-; loosing part of
the skin in early development]
Comment: This constellation was
named by Abbé Nicolas Louis de Lacaille (1713-1762) who
resided in South Africa and he named 15 of 88 constellations
according to this
link. Strangely, it's a mostly empty region of the sky.
The fact that words like this have root tags is a sign of
knowledge hidden within the structure of their creation
related to activity that reveals obvious messages not
necessarily adhoc for establishment procurements, as we
obviously do not need a star system to get to work, or maybe
we do.
The sculptor's chisel rests with the surgeon
it seems in the physical world, and the surgery in the
mental world.
ghesor-
handbook (11)
trac..
Search references:
(Caesarea Palestinae, Caesarea Philippi (worship of Pan),
Caesarea Mazaca)
research chirurgeon and enchiridion for codes;
ghesor-
handbook (11)
~caesura-
a pause, (example: spaces between words); rhythm in
the line of verse by natural means rather than primary
metrics; Greek or Latin prosody: break in a line
caused by the word itself ending within a foot, especially
when this coincides with a sense division; Music: a
pause or breathing at a point of rhythmic division in a
melody, Latin caesūra, a
cutting, from caesus, past participle of caedere,
to cut off
[research: ode- (strophe, antistrophe, epode),
root wed-2-; Theravada, elder doctrine; loss of sense of
smell*, see root sta-; labdanum*, (genus
Cistus), rockrose*]
notes: posada- pause, portulaca root
per-2-; rose moss; pose1, to rest,
pause; pose2, to oppose [althea, Aaron's beard,
Plain of Sharon]
~cestus2-
cestus1: also cesti, plural,
woman's belt or girdle, Latin, belt, from Greek
kestos, (well*), see
kent-; cestus2: a covering for the
hand made of leather straps weighted with iron or lead and
worn by boxers in ancient Rome; [covering
(prepuce)
for the head of a penis*], Latin caestus, from
caedere, to strike
[*ref: cesta- Spanish basket,
chest, scooped shaped, jai alai, compare to image of
Cetus above]
~Cetus-
a constellation in the equatorial region of the Southern
Hemisphere near Aquarius and Eridanus, Latin
cētus, whale, from Greek kētos,
[ref: Eridanus- constellation
near Fornax and Cetus; Latin fornāx,
furnace, oven, root gwher-;
fornix, arch-like structure,
white band near corpus callosum, also
brothel, vaulted cellar
(church), fornication]
brothel- house of
prostitution
Comment: from the word history provided, the word fornix
yielded the verb fornicārī, "to commit
fornication" of which was derived fornicātiō,
"whoredom, fornication" arriving around 1303. The root
gwher- leave more a sense of branding,
and the word thermos is mentioned. The trail off this root
leaves a sense of two meanings, one is delay, and the
other seems the word banausic.
~cement-
Source Latin caementum, rough-cut stone, from
caedere, to cut; see suffix -ment, result of an action,
instrument, or agent; (to diminish the minuend, see mint1:
mynet, coin and mint2: stone mint);
Warning: the word cement is a
key marker for some
heavy psyche work ahead. For starters, the root kad-
mentioned above (ref:
caducous- root kad-; loosing part of
the skin in early development) is poked
straight to the word diamond head, which may
seemingly have something to do with the psyche. There is
also no sense in defining a word as joining when you are
actually cutting, so cement serves as an antimony standout,
without proper navigation. At the very same time, it serves
as the floor for the beasts.
~chisel-
an elongated metal tool shaped with different cuts (bevels)
on one end used to shape stone, metal, or wood by striking
the other flat end with a hammer or sledge; Middle English,
from Old French cisiel, from Vulgar Latin
*cisellus, cutting tool. from diminutive of Latin
caesus, past participle of caedere, to cut, [ref:
suffix cis- root ko-; on this
side of, cone, sharpen, whet;
distortion*]
Comment: There is confusion as
to how to build a mind between sharpening the end of the
chisel or improving the way the chisel is smacked. Actually,
after zillions of swings (woodwork), the swinging isn't even
considered, or even thought about at all. It becomes attuned
to the other end result versus improving how one attacks
others by changing the size of the sledge or some other new
trickery. There is also a relation to the chirrup, which is
supposed to be a cute smacking sounds with the lips, and
its relation to the sound of the word cherub which is from
the Hebrew kĕrûb, and the rosy face,
and of course the word comedy which is a part of the
root wed-2-; Theravada, elder
doctrine. This may be related to the way people interact,
and the presence or absence of the ellipsis contained in the
church.
note: ellipsis-
(example: Old English heafod now Modern English
head); research chirurgeon and enchiridion for codes;
ghesor-
handbook (11)
|
~cide-
suffix, act of killing; Killer; Middle English, from Old
French (from Latin -cīda, killer) and Latin -cīdium,
killing, both from caedere, to strike; kill
Comment: It may seem blunt, but the
connotation left from the sense of this whole group is that
someone is squeezing the entity and what is attained is the
fruit of that entity (cider), as though the squeezer is the wolf, and
this may be intended at some degree when in actuality, it was conscience based intention for the entity to attain the
knowledge from this fruition that has been removed.
~circumcise- cutting
and removing the prepuce (skin covering end of penis, male),
(labium inner area or clitoris which is the anterior part of the
vulva, root klei-)
permanently altering the sexual behavior of the
individual by means of butchering the sexual organs, (glans
clitoridis).
~concise-
possible implant,
expressing much in few words, clear and succinct; Latin
concīsus, past participle of concīdere, to cut up :
com-, intensive prefix,: see com- + caedere, to
cut, [ref: beside- root
kom-; con1, opposition, counter2,
flat surface, enmesh*]
Comment: the polka partner to this
word is concinnity, which is to deftly join, which is actually
related to defte, which means foolish. As it stands with
this data, we have a mark-out group with possible
implants, [Warning:
From conchology (mollusks, shells) through conclave (lockable
room)]
~decide- suffix de- (see root de-
tsimmes, deterior, bias*) + cide, act of killing,
implant
Comment: Review the word
determine and the relation between antecedents in
correlation with ratios (rational and irrational) and also the
sound relation to the phrase deter and mine, as this all applies
with this chapter. Closest root is detect, root (s)teg-;
thatch, covering, crown, deck, languor**
Warning:
implants sighted- deteriorate,
detergent, detergency, and deterge, all resting
between deter and determinable
~excise-
excise2: to remove by or as if by cutting:
excised the
warmongers from power; Latin excīdere : ex- (not, outside of) +
caedere, to cut;
excise1: no
derivative, implant, Middle Dutch excijs alteration
(influenced by Latin excīsus, past participle of
excīdere, not to cut, from excise2)
of accijs, tax, probably from Old French acceis,
partly from Vulgar Latin *accēnsum (Latin ad-, ad-
+ Latin cēnsus, tax, see CENSUS) and partly from Old
French assise, legislative ordinance, see ASSIZE
Comment: This has been
revised as one version is meaning (not to cut), and one (to
continue cutting into your pocketbook) These acts of taxing with
the supposed need for colleges and police officers is not
working, so as it stands tax is mostly illegal as well known by
anyone who has studied it. These powers have been moved up the
ladder and seem now dripping down from the top as blood. The
explanation of what
excise1
really means is extremely unclear as intended.
[references: excite- root kei-2-; resuscitate, kinetic, set in
motion, dissent, see root sent-; to feel*]
~incise- the act of cutting into as with a sharp instrument:
incised the tablets with messages; to engrave (designs or
writings for example) into a surface; carve, French inciser,
from Old French enciser, from Vulgar Latin *incīsāre,
frequentative of Latin incīdere : in-, in-2 (into, within)
+ caedere, to cut
Comment: please note the meaning
here is (into) (act of dying) or possibly perception of
meaning.
~precise- possible
implant; Latin praecīsus, past participle of
praecīdere, to shorten : prae-, pre- + cadere,
to cut, note: this word is
extremely problematic as it is surrounded by roots of concern,
such as kaput-; and praetor root ei-;
mode of knowledge; prayer, which is feminine of Latin
precārious, root prek-, and the strange word
précis which is like a backward thesis. This word is
probably only useful in a factory or shop where the results is
visible.
Quote: "The setting up of
this Maypole was a lamentable spectacle to the precise
separatists that lived at New Plymouth." (Thomas Morton
- AHD)
~recision-
the act of interchange [passage between (writing, thinking,
reading) and (speaking, traveling, interchanging) as balanced as
possible manner*]; Latin rescindere : re-, re- +
scindere, to split; rescind; see root skei-;
split stick, indifferent*; rescript- rewriting, root
skribh-; to cut, sift, incise, write back, intestinal
fortitude*
~scissors-
a double set of blades (similar to chisels) attached to (one
another) midway, using a (swivel pin), but only one inside edge
of each elongated piece of metal is bevels so that when the
opposite ends
are squeezed, a form of leverage is created between the bevels;
any method by which these four legs are analogical to physical
motion such as walking, or many other possible movements, [from
alteration influenced by Latin scissor, cutter, from
scissus, cut; see SCISSION] of Middle English sisours,
scissors, from Old French cisoires, from Vulgar Latin
*cīsōria, from Late Latin plural
of cīsōrium, cutting instrument, from Latin caesus,
past participle of caedere, to cut
Metus is contained in here:
mē-2-
Isis (21);
and seems to imply a type of bonding between
humans that may not emphasize the allusion of color, that being
pale and other shades of pale, and Cetus may in
fact be the well (whale) that is shared between George and
Gracie.
R. Mark Sink 2008AUGUST14
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Some of these descriptions include interpretations from the American
Heritage Dictionary of the English Language - 3rd Edition, and
the King James Version of the Holy Bible printed from 1970-1987
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