| |
"If
these megrims are the effect of Love, thank Heaven, I never
knew what it was." (Samuel Richardson - AHD)
"This distinction seems to me to go to the root
of the matter" (William James - AHD)
2009: The Search for The Sapient Stone
Language continues...
Chapter 53: The Cape of Good Hope - Blue, Purple,
and Scarlet
Exodus 28: 16-21 King James
[16] Foursquare it
shall be being doubled; a span shall be the length thereof, and
a span shall be the breadth thereof.
[17] And thou shalt
set in it settings of stones, even four rows of stones: the
first row shall be a sardius, a topaz, and a carbuncle: this
shall be the first row. [18]
And the second row shall be an emerald, a sapphire, and a
diamond. [19] And the
third row a ligure, an agate, and an amethyst.
[20] And the fourth
row a beryl, and an onyx, and a jasper: they shall be set
in gold in their inclosings.
[21] And the stones shall be with the names of the children of Israel, twelve,
according to their names, like the engravings of a signet; every
one with his name shall they be according to the twelve tribes.
{refs: Auriga- Capella,
ōs-
governor (24)}
Genesis 3:3 King James
But of the fruit of the tree which is in the midst of the
garden, God hath said, Ye shall not eat of it, neither shall
ye touch it, lest ye die. {ref:
gher-1-
cronus (47)}
January 8, 2009: (written January
5) The Cape of Good Hope is not a blue Monte
Carlo, but you should be able to feel her moves in this chapter
similar to the four wheel chariot portrayed by the Auriga or
Charioteers of the midst of the garden. The errand is
strenuously arrived as cape fear, and as portrayed in
Exodus 28. The power of the lord is accessed, in all its forms,
as candy, or the carrefour that becomes the fork in the road. It
is Jason, leader of the Agronauts (see
nave), who rests between the jasmine and the jasper, both in
the rabbit trail and the herbal analogies being eaten. (Reference:
Jacob from Isaac for one of Abraham's 12 sons but also a tribe,
as referenced in the web of Genesis and Exodus.) Is is interesting that
jasper is also the twelfth stone in Revelation, and in
evaluating the King James book using what has now been
correlated does reveal a sense of it being naked, and also
adored with beauty and the beast.
There are other books that have come out of
the midst, that of the spirit, the Koran, and millions of
others, and the Bible belt effect has been known to slap real
hard, as violence, and as fast as it can spin. It is becoming
obvious that this can be confirmed as hyperbole in logic, and
palavers of a masculine Vishnu hiding an obsolete anarchy that
lives in the twilight zone of death masking destruction. This is
like the Taurus and Aries playing diamonds are forever. Our
future bears an inescapable lynching of knowledge by using a
handful of books or ideologies to carry the load from the blue
to the scarlet leaving the purple as a lemon that only feeds on
the noise, and becoming its own poltergeist.
The fork in the road begins with a Trinity
who has been working undercover, and understanding the
psychology of the stigmas coming from the archer to the hair of
the wild goat and beyond. I have snatched up 86 words, so we have a
larger chapter to start the ring around rosy.
Part one:
Carotin
|
 |
5-horologe1-horology-horoscope1-hour-year-et-yēr-
year, season, Suffixed basic form *yēr-o-, Old English-
gēar, year, Germanic- *jēram, Suffixed o-grade
form *yōr-ā, HOUR; HOROLOGE, HOROLOGY, HOROSCOPE, Greek-
hōra, season, (see gher-1-) carotin*
[In Pokorny 1, ei- 293] (horologe2 -
leg-) (horoscope2 - spek-) |
|
~horologe1- a
device that is capable of being read as a record of time; analemma;
sundial; a telling of time, clock;
tally kept;
horoscope, Middle English orloge, from Old French, from
Latin hōrologium, from Greek
hōrologium,
from Greek hōrologian : hōra, hour, season (see root
yēr-) + legein, to speak; (see
root leg-) also
Horologium: a constellation in the Southern Hemisphere
near Hydrus, Eridanus, and Reticulum, Latin hōrologium,
horologe Reference:
-hora- a
traditional round dance of Romania, Modern Hebrew hōrā,
from Romanian horā, from Turkish hora, perhaps
from Modern Greek khoro, accusative of khoros,
round dance, from Greek, (see gher-1-
cronus (47))
~horology-
a science of measuring time; classification for the art of
making time pieces, Greek hōra, hour, season +
-LOGY
The hour which consists of the
12 canonical hours is somehow altered (example: military
plays duck dodgers with 24 time), but stemming from the
round dance, as the root used has its own root. This also
creates another anomaly in the process with the application
of season which is in four parts, and when applied to
the mathematics, creates a trilogy in the matter of interest
that may be associated with the strangely named
constellation which happens to have three names. It seems
possibly a type of sexual arousal.
~horoscope1-
mathematical prediction based on an 11 star system, in which
one is not actually being a star, that of the moon, while
all the other planets including the sun have star power. The
first four planets are primary and the remaining five may
correlate to other functions and psychological applications,
all being applied to one's timing of birth, French, from Old
French, from Latin hōroscopus. from, Greek
hōroskopos : hōra, hour, season, see yēr-
+ skopos, observer, see root spek-;
espy, spectrum, bishop, the keep*
These writings are partially
concerned with determining much of the navigation related to
the horoscope, but this work is only 30% complete. Of note,
the bishop carries with it the two version of 12, and the
spek- root is labeled as "someone who watches",
so this may indicate another sense where the observer is not
oneself but also speaks. Also, one should realize that the
astrological elements one seemingly obtains have already
occurred, and deal strictly with the past, not the future.
~hour-
telling time in one of 24 equalized parts; midnight to noon
to midnight; 12-hour clock with additional 60 markings for
minutes embedded over the 12 markings portrayed as the
Zodiac in a circular formation; a unit of measurement of
longitude or right ascension, equal to 15°, also 1/24 of a
great circle; a segment of this time recorded or available;
a process of telling time by always referring to the last
hour plus how ever many minutes are counted; The canonical
hours, Middle English, from Old French houre, from
Latin hōra, from Greek season, time
Reference:
-houri- voluptuous, alluring woman, and one of the
beautiful virgins of the Koranic paradise, French, from
Persian hūrī, from Arabic hūr, plural of
haurā', dark-eyed woman
~year- a
period of time designated for the journey earth makes around
the sun consisting of 365 days (8760 hours), 5 hours, 49
minutes (525,949m), and 12 seconds (31,556,952s) of mean
solar time; application of this period into a Gregorian
calendar beginning on January 1, and ending on December 31,
and divided into 12 months, 52 weeks, and 365 days, every
fourth year having 366 days; calendar year; a sidereal year;
a solar year; approximation for this time period; specific
period of time of any length, Middle English yere,
from Old English gēar
The meridians, as in longitudes divide the earth into 24
parts, and it is these parts that offset each degree of
time, allowing each region to accommodate the round dance
making sure that it addresses the east to west in backward
formation if facing north, and clockwise if observer is
facing south. Then, emphasis is place on north as
demonstrated by earth showing us the area of magnetism that
serves up the stronger field, and this may be used as
obstruction. The (seconds) also play a significant role, and
sit at the base of all systems, ticking away.
The root
ei-
the joker (14)
contains January, but also both
Hinayana1,
(the lesser vehicle, Theraveda), and Mahayana1,
which is concerned with social behavior and universal
balance. The first of these two holds the gates to hell in
perfect view, and according to the construction of our world
and the time bandits running it, this is exactly where we
are headed for the ritual worship of the moon god, and it is
primarily this way because knowledge is considered
forbidden, in turn for worship of the day, and the machine. |
Part two:
Deplume
28-abject-adjacent-adjective-amice-catheter-conjecture-deject-diesis-ejaculate
-eject-enema-gist-inject-interject-jacittation-jess-jet-joist-object-paresis-parget
-project-reject-subjacent-subject-superjacent-synesis-traject-et-yē-
to throw, Contracted from *yeæ-, Extended zero-grade
forms *yak-yo- and *yak-ē- (stative), GIST, (GITE),
JACITTATION, JESS, JET2, JOIST, ADJECT, ADJACENT, ADJECTIVE,
AMICE, CONJECTURE, DEJECT, (EASE), EJACULATE, EJECT, INJECT,
INTERJECT, OBJECT, PARGET, PROJECT, REJECT, SUBJACENT, SUBJECT,
SUPERJACENT, TRAJECT, from Latin iacere, to throw, lay,
and iacēre, to lie down (< "to be thrown") and iaculum,
dart; Basic form *yē-, and zero-grade form *yæ-,
CATHETER, DIESIS, ENEMA, PARESIS, SYNESIS, from Greek hienai,
to send, throw, deplume* [Pokorny ịē- 502] |
|
~abject-
a presentation in demeanor that portrays an inability to
show compassion; mean2; complete lack of awareness presented
in contemptuous modality; reflection lost, Middle English,
outcast, from Latin abjectus, past participle of
abicere, to cast away : ab-, from AB-1 +
iacere, to throw It is
foolish to throw away AB-1 as this is your operating system,
and the ability to think which is above the heads of those
who only see what they want to see, and attempt to plug you
into AB-2. This only leads to the abjure, and to swear at
AB-1 from the misuse of it as your own prejudicial judge, see
root yewes-; ritual formula applied abjectly on
others verses respect for humanity and the true causes of
imperfection, wild olive* (see devilwood)
~adjacent-
close to; lying near: adjacent city; next to; adjoining:
adjacent land, Middle English, from Latin adiacēns,
adiacent-, present participle of adiacēre, to lie
near : ad-, ad- + iacēre, to lie
There is a difference between "to lie down"
and to add "to lie", so technically, this word is screwy,
however, there seems another message that may have to do with
sleep, and the gears from the previous root. Originally, the
dictionary continually addressed this word as plural, but this
may be intentionally deceiving.
~adjective-
Grammar: any of the classification of words used to
modify a (noun) or other (substantive) by limiting, qualifying,
or specifying and distinguished in English morphologically by
one of several suffixes, such as -able, -ous, -er,
and -est, or syntactically
by position directly preceding a (noun) or (nominal phrase),
such as red in a red house; Santee
Claus; not standing alone; derivative or dependent;
Grammar: Adjectival: an adjectival
clause; Law:
Prescriptive; remedial, Middle
English, from old French adiectif, from Late Latin
adiectīvus, from adiectus, past participle of
adiicere, to add
to : ad-, ad- + iacere,
to throw
Again, words do not throw themselves, they
must be read, and thought about. The battle between the
adjective, the verb, and what is known an the anonymous noun is
quite intriguing, and that of the portmanteaus adieus. Once
these words are memorized, they are spoken and create a new
reality.
~amice-
a liturgical vestment consisting of an oblong piece of white
linen worn around the neck and shoulders and partly under the
alb (albe, see root albho-); Middle English,
probably from Old French amis, plural of amit,
from Latin amictus, mantle, from past participle of
amicīre, to wrap around : ambi-, around; see AMBI-
(both; see root
ambhi-
bebe (26))
+ iacere, to throw
The alb is a Roman Catholic adopted
practice from Medieval Latin alba, from (vestis)
alba, white (garment), feminine of Latin albus, white.
This may be associated with the Albacete, and that of the city
of southeast Spain west-southwest of Valencia where the Moors
and Christians battled it out between 1145 and 1146. The
albho- root is also the daub, which is plaster, grease,
or mud, which may be three ways of manufacturing a new you, and
its pork is affinity*.
~catheter-
label for a hollow, flexible plastic tube for insertion into a
body cavity, duct (example: torture
demonstrated by U.S. government and documented) or vessel
that may allow passage of fluids in either direction; used for
urine drainage and heart diagnostics, Late Latin, from Greek
kathetēr, from kathienai, to send down : kat-,
kata-, cata- (reverse, see root kat-) +
hienai, hē-, to send
Many women have risen out of the sea for
various reasons (examples: see the many Catherines), and the
confusion between them and the adjacent other has caused much
grief, as it is often felt as backwards. The kat-
root is labeled "young puppy", and this brings to mind the
dog/cat relationship occurring in the colorful house. A warning
comes along with this to be aware of the three furies, and the
dachshund guarding the tree.
~conjecture-
a usual form of judgment (fuzzy nesting) assimilated
inconclusively; opinion often surmised as speculation; a
connection between thieves; Middle English, from Old French,
from Latin coniectūra, from coniectus, past
participle of conicere, to infer
: com-, com- + iacere, to throw
Everything about this word is fuzzy, and
inference has nothing to do with conjecture, as true inference
is very hard work, and is NOT a part of this root (see
bher-1- aviatrix
(37)
furtive-infer-metaphor),
and is not included in the large nesting of words tagged into
this root. This may be the same as adding an adjective to any
clause. Conjecture works great when the knowledge used is
already blurred from view and proper discernment. Furtive is
from furtum, thief, and this is often seen as a
skinned mammal around the neck, and sometimes penetrating the
skull.
~deject-
a conjecture of reversing or lowering the spirit and soul;
dishearten, Middle English dejecten, from Latin
dēicere, dēiect-, to cast down : dē-, de- (reverse) +
iacere, to throw
This seems like a technique, which may be
implemented in this root by the following. The deicer is often
just ethylene glycol. Deject ends a four-pack that begins with
deism, deity, and déjà vu, see root
deiw-
deadems (25)
~diesis-
Printing: see double dagger (‡), Medieval Latin, semitone
(which was indicated by a double dagger), from Latin, quarter
tone, from Greek diesis, a letting through, from
diienai, to send through : dia- + hienai, to send
From [link];
A diesis is a comma type of musical interval, usually meaning
the difference between three justly tuned major thirds (tuned in
the frequency ratio 5:4) and an octave (in the ratio 2:1), equal
to 128:125 or about 41.06 cents.
Distraction for this word occurs in the
lexeme at diocese, and the
Dione program, which is another
name for Zeus. Dionysia is also
associated with this festival of empiric justice for Satin.
See root
deiw-
deadems (25)
~ejaculate-
implanted use; discharge as
ejection also considered abrupt and associated with orgasm but
also considered an act of uttering something passionately while
also being acceptable in language; Latin ēiaculārī, ēiaculāt-
: ē-, ex-, ex- (outside of, away,
not; see eghs-) +
iaculārī, to throw (from
iaculum, dart, (ejaculation- brief, pious utterance or
prayer)
~eject-
implanted use, to throw out
forcefully; expel; to compel to leave: the food was not fit
to eat, so it was ejected; a process of shooting which may
in effect kill or harm: the settlers were evicted from their
lives; an emergency exit that prevents self-destruction:
the beast portrayed the ejected need to survive; Middle
English ejecten, from Latin ēicere, ēiect-, ē-,
ex-, ex- (outside of, away, not;
see eghs-) + to throw,
Synonyms: expel, evict, dismiss,
oust
Based on the root construction, this is an
operative group use which may be associated with the
élan vital, which bears the same
construction from the word élan,
which again is (not to throw). The eland is a deer, and the
units may dress for the part, and follow the zeal demonstrated
by the burning bush.
~enema-
a process of injecting liquid into the rectum through the anus
thought to cleanse or stimulate the bowels and intestines
located in this area or to clear blockages; Late Latin, from
Greek, from enienai, to send in, inject : en-, in;
see EN-2 (into, within) + hienai, to send
~gist-
implant, slander applied to law; (central
idea?) (substance?) Anglo-Norman (cest action)
gist, (this action) lies, third person singular of
gesir, to lie, from Latin
iacēre
~inject-
a forcing or driving of soluble (fluids) into something: the
fool injected the gin right out of the bottle; Medical:
a process of introducing (unproven in most all cases) drugs and
concoctions synthetically made as a false form of vaccine that
works on the same principle as the gist (quarantine required); a
process of cover for false conjecture: the doctor injected
the drug into the orbit of immunity turning the body into a
stream; Latin inicere, iniect-, to throw in : in-,
in; see IN-2 + iacere, to throw
Once someone IS ALREADY ILL, injections can
be beneficial, such as the penicillium brush, however, vaccines
should required full quarantine if they are to be given, as
giving shots and also letting the individuals walk in the open
is complete lunacy, as this only spreads the injected virus, and
has been shown to disrupt the immune system which may be
intended.
~interject-
an interruption: the war mongers abjected as interjection;
to interpose as introduction using a bit of force labeled onto
emotions as cover: Ugh!, Latin interīicere, interīect-
: inter-, inter- (place in a grave, see root ters-;
toast, parch, burn; made-up*) + to throw |
|
~jacittation-
false boasting or claim, especially one detrimental to the
interest or humanity of others: their boast was only to
defend their jacittation to kill; Pathology: an
intercourse of conjecture accumulating upon itself as acute over
astute; Medieval Latin iactitātiō, iactitātiōn-, false
declaration, from Latin iactitātus, past participle of
iactitāre, to utter, frequentative of iactāre, to
boast, frequentative of iacere, to throw
Originally the pathology was directed to
those who toss in their sleep as distraction to use a label
inserted that is an operative metaphor (acute
disease). This is the measurement of sickness intensity,
and should not be analogical to tossing in one's sleep which
could apply to thousands of possibilities.
~jess-
a short strap fastened around the leg of a bird or hawk used in
falconry, to which a leash may be fastened, Middle English
ges, from Old French, plural of jet, something thrown, from
Vulgar Latin *iectus, alteration of Latin iactus,
past participle of iacere, to throw
This may represent the production of the
Chimera, the lion, goat, and serpent union, as portrayed in the
geographical arrangements of the Holy land. See root ghei-;
hibernate, female animal one year (winter) old, cotangent*. This
strange correlation matches a journey from the sea, up and
around to the fire, while below the fire is ice. See more smei-
jess (28)
~jet-
jet2: a
high-velocity fluid stream forced with pressure out of a
small-diameter opening or nozzle; something emitted in or as if
in a high-velocity fluid stream: the coyote spurted on the
back of the beast; a jet-propelled vehicle: fire full of
toxins spewed out the back of the jet; to propel outward;
squirt; French, from Old French, from jeter, to spout forth,
throw, from Vulgar Latin *iectāre, alteration of Latin
iactāre, frequentative of iacere, to throw, jet1:
no derivative, a dense black coal that is
polished as stone; black as coal: jet hair, Middle English, from
Anglo-Norman geet, from Latin gagātēs, from Greek
gagatēs, after Gagas, a town of Lycia
Warning: To
subject, this is the emulating of a secondary education
propagated as entertainment, as the lycée which neighbors with
the lycanthrope, the werewolf. In crossing the open courtyard or
metope, this may also be that which overlays the progenitor
Jesus, who supposedly was hung on a cross with three nails,
possibly as a jessamine, or jasmine, which is bright yellow
predominantly, (worship of Helios), and not jasper that includes
the true colors red and brown.
~joist-
any of a group of parallel horizontal beams set from vertical
wall to wall which serve as the tying bond for structure of the
existing constructed unit, usually used for living or office
quarters, Middle English giste, joiste, from Old
French giste, from feminine past participle of gesir,
to lie down, from Latin iacēre
The joist can also serve as the
jolly roger, and the journey
mentioned earlier that leads to disease, and propagated in the
open as legitimate, when it is contributive directly with the
diseases. (example: one buck a year, or a million, etc.)
~object-
a perception in the senses that seems transitory or real; aim;
a feeling of fear of not knowing the unknown; purpose; a
process of living, especially that of
living a lie; goal; Grammar: a noun or
substantive that receives or is affected by the action or
perception of a verb within a sentence; Philosophy:
something consider perceptible by the mind; the relocation of
the senses to the abstract as an automatic demeanor when this is
not always correctly navigated (example: to object is not always
objection if the subjection is mostly conjecture, as the
objector is actually preventing abstraction to be based, when it
may not have a base, yet one may be forced to be seen as the
object, when actually forced to be a subject of abjection by
making an what is classified as objection); an often
consideration emitted upon others who are different by
automatically moving them into the abstract senses (warning:
dangerous mechanism used by propagandists to move the object
into the clouds, such as an invisible enemy); a dead body;
Middle English, from Old French, from Medieval Latin objectum,
thing put before the mind, from
neuter past participle of Latin obicere, to put before :
ob-, before, toward, see OB- (inverse; see root epi;
oblast1, Charles*) + iacere, to throw, see yē-
in Appendix V., from Middle English objecten, from Old
French objecter, from Latin obiectāre,
frequentative of obicere, to
hinder, oppose
This system works as knowledge being
opposed in the larger sense of thinking, and also seemingly
perfect for pathological alterations. Yet, the truth of the
matter is those who thrive from this actually become idiots, and
especially at higher levels of power. See also root wal-;
oblast2, value, power, rule, Maundy Thursday*
~paresis-
a perception either physically or mentally of slight or partial
paralysis; general paresis, Greek, act of letting go, paralysis,
from parienai, to let fall : para-, beside; see
PARA-1 + hienai, to throw
The pareu is thought of as square,
similar to the magic box, and the
pareve is separating out the flora from the fauna,
and then partaking of both sides indiscriminately ignoring the
werewolf of the blood fleshing done on the red carpet as though
this process makes it ok.
~parget2-
a mixture, such as roughcast or plaster, used to coat walls
and line chimneys; ornamental work in plaster or stucco;
Middle English, probably from pargetten, to parget,
from Old French pargeter, parjeter, to throw
about (par-, intensive prefix, from Latin iactāre,
frequentive of iacere, see yē-) and
from Old French progeter, to roughtcast a wall (por-,
forward, ultimately from Latin porrō (see
per-1-
planck's constant (30)) + iactāre,
to throw
The prefix par is without a doubt
intensive, and rooted to
peræ-2- hammer*, but may be used
in manners that obstruct. It contains the parce, pair, peer2,
nonpareil, and the focus is proportion.
~project-
the subjected union; scheme; a process of working with
others; operation; extensive task undertaken by an
individual or by a group; plan;
adventure in mockery as projectory: housing
project; to thrust outward or forward:
projected empirical power; to throw forward; hurl:
the dancer projected balance; to send out into space;
cast: the voyager was cast in the projector; a
process of projecting light through a movable medium resulting
in an image that also moves; film projector;
Mathematics: to produce (a projection); face value;
Psychology: a demeanor that externalizes and attributes
(emotions for example) to someone or something abstract; to
convey an impression whether real or not; jack frost; to
predict through the attribution of one's own attitudes,
feelings, or desires as an unconscious or sycophancy defense
against anxiety or guilt: her voice
rattled in the distance; Middle English projecte,
from Latin proīectum, projecting structure, from neuter
past participle of prōicere, to throw out : prō-,
forth, see PRO-1 + iacere, to throw
~reject-
implanted use, ejection as
rejection, see abject:
the refuse collected in piles; to discard by devaluation;
spit or vomit, see serpent;
Medical: human body tissue assimilated by operation, but
not accepted by the body, Middle English rejecten, from
Latin rēicere, rēiect- : re-, re- (again,
backward, see root re-) + iacere, to throw
It makes little sense to throw backward,
but the one told this definitely feels the black hole impression
and the preferences overriding the abjector, not objector.
~subjacent-
seemingly located beneath; undertaking; Latin subiacēns,
subiacent-, present participle of subiacēre, to lie
beneath : sub-, sub- (nearly, almost, under, see root
upo-) + iacēre, to lie
If one entitles their subjects with a
mighty lie, then this is the distance echoed from the lady
wearing the red coat who is always standing around, but you
never really notice her or her intent. Then, she will sing to
you in her tales every once in a while to make sure you believe
she is real.
~subject-
accessible expression which needs navigation; emotion:
citizens subjected to acceptable emotions or demeanors; [see
mien, from French mine, inner state of mind:
"He was a Vietnam veteran with a haunted mien" (James
Traub - AHD)]; fugue; under
authority abjected as power; the projected result of artistic
expression; paradigm; Logic: the term of a proposition;
location of doer described by predication in pronunciation; see
inflection; the mind or thinking part as distinguished
from the object of thought; Philosophy: the essential nature of
or substance of something as distinguished from its attributes;
to submit for consideration; (cause to
experience; live a lie); Middle English, from Old French,
from Latin sūbiectus, from past participle of sūbicere,
to subject : sub-, sub- (nearly, almost, under, see root
upo-; open, Upanishad; MC2*) + iacere, to
throw, Synonyms: matter, topic, theme; Matter
refers to the material that becomes the object of thought or
discourse: "This distinction seems to me to go to the root
of the matter" (William James - AHD)
The propaganda is so thick around this
word, it is overwhelming. First, you are told that you are a
subject to authority, when
it is actually that you are an object of authority, and
knowledge consummates law which is abstract. As long as you
think you're subject to abstraction, you're paresis may be
effective. An example would be beliefs related to such as global
warming, where you may actually catch fire. Another example is,
you are told you have a symptom, when it is more about pathos
and sorting pathological conjecture. You are also told that a
dead body is a subject, and that's also you according to
propaganda. A dead body is the object under study that becomes a
subjected experience.
~superjacent-
resting or lying immediately above or nearby on something else
perceived; Latin superiacēns, superiacent-, present
participle of superiacēre, to lie over : super-,
super- (above, superior, see root uper-;
sirloin, summit, masker*)
+ iacēre, to lie down
~synesis-
implant, see
synergy; a synthetic construction, such as a pronoun that
forms a unity that differs from logic, (example:
rezone, if the group becomes to
large, it can be split into new objectives); to throw the sun;
root fabrications omitted
~traject-
implanted use for double bond; to
transmit through the perception of throwing, Latin trāiicere,
trāiect-, to throw across : trā, trāns-, trans-
(across, on the other side, see root teræ-2-;
nostril, overcoming death, transient; meridian*) +
iacere, to throw
This word is placed on probation because it
is used to kill, and this is not ejecting steel into space, but
metal of death upon the earth using this science, which should
be illegal and forbidden by International law, as today, defense
is offense, which is a disease. |
Part three: Dwarf star
53-alpenhorn-althorn-bicornulate-capricorn-carat-carotid-carrot-cerastes
-ceratodus1-cerebellum-cerebrum-cervine-cervix-charivari1-cheer-chelicera
-cladoceran-corn2-cornea-corneous-corner-cornet-corniculate-cornification-cornu
-corydalis-corymb-corynebacterium-coryphaeus-cranium-criosphinx-flügelhorn2-hart
-hartebeest-horn-hornblende-hornet-keratin-kerato-lamellicorn-longicorn-migraine
-monoceros-olecranon2-reindeer-rhinoceros-rinderpest-saveloy-serval-sirdar1
-triceratops-tricorn-unicorn2-et-ker-1-
horn, head, with derivatives referring to horned
animals, horn-shaped objects, and projecting parts;
Zero-grade form *kr-, [ Suffixed form *kr-n-,
Old English- horn, (HORNBEAM); ALPENHORN, ALTHRON,
FLÜGELHORN, HORNBLENDE, Old High German- horn, sourced
Germanic *hurnaz ]; CORN2, CORNEA, CORNEOUS, CORNER,
CORNET, CORNICULATE, CORNU; BOCORNUATE, CAPRICORN, CORNIFICATION,
LAMELLICORN, LONGICORN, TRICORN, UNICORN, Latin- cornū,
horn, Suffixed and extended form *krs-n-, Old English-
hyrnet, hornet, Germanic- *hurznuta-;
Suffixed
form *kr-ei-, Old Norse- hreinn, reindeer,
Germanic- *hraina-; Old High German- hrind,
rinderpest, ox, Germanic- *hrinda-; Suffixed extended
form *kræs-no-, CRANIUM, MIGRAINE, OLECRANON, Greek-
kranion, skull, upper part of the head; Suffixed form *kr-æ-,
CHARIVARI, CHEER, Greek- karē, kara, head; Greek-
karoun, carotid, to stupify, be stupified (< "to
feel heavy-headed"); Greek- karōton, carrot, (from
its hornlike shape); Possibly extended form *krī-, Greek-
krios, criosphinx, ram; Suffixed form *ker-wo-,
CERVINE, SERVAL, Latin- cervus, deer; Latin- cervix,
cervix, neck; Extended and Suffixed from *keru-do-,
[ Old English- heorot, hart, stag, Middle Dutch
hert, hartebeest, deer, hart, both sourced Germanic-
*herutaz ]; Extended form *keræs- CARAT,
CERASTES, KERATO-; CERATODUS, CHELICERA, CLADOCERAN, KERATIN,
MONOCEROS, RHINOCEROS, TRICERATOPS, Greek- keras, horn; Persian-
sar, sirdar, head; Suffixed form *keræs-ro-,
CEREBELLUM, CEREBRUM, SAVELOY, Latin- cerebrum, brain; Extended
o-grade form *koru-, Greek- korumbos, corymb,
uppermost point (< "head"); Greek- koruphē, coryphaeus,
head; Suffixed form *koru-do-, Greek- korudos,
corydalis, crested lark; Suffixed form *koru-nō, Greek-
korunē, corynebacterium, Greek- korunē, club,
mace [Pokorny 1 ker- 574], dwarf star* (ceratodus2
- dent-) (charivari2
- gweræ-1-
davot1*) (corn1
- græ-no-) (flügelhorn1
- pleu-) (olecranon1
- el-) (sirdar2
- dher-) |
|
~alpenhorn- a curved, wooden horn, sometimes as
long as 20 feet (approximately 6 meters) used by herders in
the Alps to serenade the cattle in the pasture where they
will commune when a horn is blown, German Alpenglühen
: Alpen, Alps + Horn, horn, from Middle High
German, from Old High German It is Abraham who had the
wife named Sarah, and this is analogical to the metope
experience in some way with the representation described by
the tones demonstrated in the sound of the alpenhorn which
sits in front of the alpha, the first Greek letter. The
alpha is also the brightest star in a system, similar to the
sun. However, the story between the sun and moon is more
complicated.
~althorn-
any of several upright, valved brass wind instruments, used
especially in bands and orchestras, German : alt,
alto (from Italian alto, see ALTO) + Horn, horn, from
Middle High German, from Old High German
~bicornulate-
santee claus- also bicorn, having two horns or
horn-shaped parts; shaped like a crescent, from Bi-1 (twice
proportion; usage problems) + Latin cornū,
horn [ref: bi-2-, prefix, bio-]
~Capricorn-
the constellation in the equatorial region of the Southern
Hemisphere, near Aquarius and Sagittarius; the tenth sign of
the Zodiac in astrology, also called Goat, Middle English
Capricorne, from Latin Capricornus : caper,
capr-, goat + cornū,
horn
References:
-Cape jasmine- see gardenia
-capercaillie- large grouse ( Tetrao urogallus
), native to northern Europe, dark plumage, fanlike tail,
also called wood grouse, Latin caballus, of
Celtic origin + coille, genitive of coille,
forest
-Capernaum- city in ancient Palestine on the
northwest shore of the Sea of Galilee, home of Jesus, and
associated with the Sermon on the Mount
~carat-
a unit of weight for precious stones, equal to 200
milligrams; variant of karat, Middle English, from
Old French, from Medieval Latin quarātus,
from Arabic qīrāt, weight of four grains, from
Greek keration, a weight, diminutive of keras,
horn
Reference:
-Michelangelo Caravaggio- (1573-1610) Italian painter
of the baroque whose influential works, such as
Deposition of Christ (1604) are marked by intense
realism and revolutionary use of light
The word grain has its own
(root græ-no-; corn1, gram2, pomegranate,
concave*), and a thick trail around it, as this is
considered a one-seeded fruit, and precious stones are
valued only on their (LOOKS), so the ability to corner the
market is made simple, as this only requires cutting and
polishing, undisclosed pre-stock, and the values can be
controlled, manipulated, and based on complete fabrication
of reality. If it is envy who is gazing, food is all she can
see.
~carotid-
either of the two major arteries coming from the heart, one
on each side of the neck carrying blood into the cerebral
region of the brain, French carotide, from Greek
karōtides, carotid arteries,
from karoun, to stupefy (Latin stupefacere :
stupēre, to be stunned + facere, to make, see
FACT)
With this arrangement, knowledge
makes you stupid, while you deal with it as fact, but envy
is lying, and this seems backwards. It is the emotional
world that stupefies, and knowledge is the protector. Also,
there should be correlations related to the tides, possibly
neap tide, first and third quarters of the moon phases
matching when high tide is at its least intensity. The study
of Up in general may also be useful, as in nephology-
the study of clouds, Greek nephos, see root
nebh-; nebula, rain, cloud, aura, Ceyx*
~carrot-
a biennial Eurasian plant (Daucus carota subsp. sativus)
in the parsley family widely cultivated as as annual for its
edible taproot; a usually tapering, elongated, fleshly,
orange vegetable root of this plant, also called Queen
Anne's lace; an enticement often overlaying its truer
purpose as a method to self-feed: the carrot and
stick effect was evident in the bulging defense budget,
French carotte, from Old French garroite, from
Latin carōta, from Greek
karōton
~cerastes-
any of the several venomous snakes of the genus Cerastes,
such as the horned viper, having hornlike projections over
each eye, Middle English, from Latin cerastēs,
from Greek kerastēs, horned serpent, from keras,
horn
~ceratodus1-
any of the various extinct lungfishes of the genus
Ceratodus, of the Triassic and Cretaceous periods; see
barramunda, New Latin Ceratodus, genus name : Greek
keras, kerat-, horn, see ker1-
+ Greek odous, tooth, see root dent-;
tusk, canine tooth, carrot*
It may be that the Cerberus, the three-headed dog who
guards Hades consists of: the upper jaw, the lower jaw, and
the brain. With these three, you will undoubtedly want more
food, especially with teeth inserted into the sockets as
bicuspids or more roots occasionally. The Ceres
by scientific classification, was the first asteroid
orbiting between Mars and Saturn, god of agriculture, and
this may be analogical to the concave experience.
Reference: Ceres- root ker2-;
crescent, concrete, crew1, boy, Dioscuri, ear2*
~cerebellum-
the trilobed structure of the brain, lying posterior to the
pons and medulla oblongata and inferior to the occipital
lobes of the cerebral hemispheres, that is responsible for
the regulation and coordination of complex voluntary
muscular movements as well as the maintenance of posture and
balance, Medieval Latin, from Latin, diminutive of
cerebrum, brain
~cerebrum-
the large, rounded structure of the brain occupying most of
the cranial cavity, divided into two cerebral hemispheres
that are joined at the bottom by the corpus callosum. It
controls and integrates motor, sensory, and higher mental
functions, such as thought, reason, emotion, and memory,
Latin, brain
~cervine-
implant, related to deer, Latin
cervīnus, from cervus,
deer [The serval is a long-legged
wildcat ( Felis serval ) of Africa, having a tawny coat with
black spots, from French, from Portuguese (lobo) cerval,
deerlike (wolf), lynx, from Late Latin cervālis, from
Latin cervus, deer.] see
commandeer
~cervix-
the neck; a neck-shaped anatomical structure such as the
narrow outer end of the uterus, Latin cervīx,
neck Envy goes by many names
and feelings, that of the cat, the serpent, and the deer, so
a word is created that comes from the cat that sounds like
service, which is another thing she likes to use on all
sexes for confusion, especially men.
◊~charivari1-
see shivaree, French, from Old French, perhaps from
Late Latin carībaria,
headache, from Greek karēbaria : karē, head,
see ker1-
+ barus, heavy, see
gweræ-1-;
guru, brute, grave2, blitzkreig,
davot1*, [shivaree- a mock
noisy serenade for newlyweds]
~cheer-
a lightness of spirit or mood, gaiety or joy; a source of
joy or comfort: good cheer rests in the home; to shout
without making any noise; good spirit, Middle English chere,
mood, from Old French chiere, face, (see chiral), from Late
Latin cara, from Greek kara, head Cheer is
first defined predominantly coming from the good spirit,
then it is immediately moved to emotion with the use of
urge, and
leaders, where you are
taught to clap and make noise, but this is now much more
than cheer, it is envy. It seems ok to show some envy, if
the observer is aware of what it actually is. It does come
in handy with sports, as this allows the mechanism to be
pre-installed. The observer can now feel cheer being subtly
manipulated, and for all useful purposes, seems
counter-productively used.
~chelicera-
either of the first pair of fanglike appendages near the
mouth of an arachnid, such as a spider, often modified for
grasping and piercing, New Latin : CHELA (New Latin khēlē,
claw) + Greek keras, horn
~cladoceran- any
of the various small, mostly freshwater crustaceans of the
order Cladocera, which includes the water flies, New Latin
Cladocera, order name : Greek klados,
branch (phylogenetic relationships; see clade) + Greek
keras, horn
~corn2-
a horny thickening of the skin, commonly found on or near
toes, but also on fingers, resulting from pressure or that
of repeated rubbings, also called (clavus; Latin,
nail) see callus; Middle English corne,
from Old French, horn, from Latin cornū,
corn1- (Zea mays), see
root græ-no-; corn1, gram2, pomegranate,
concave* Reference:
-clevis-
U-shaped metal piece with holes in each end which a pin is
inserted as a fastening device, from clevi, possibly
from Scandinavian origin, akin to Old Norse klofi,
cleft, see root gleubh-; cleave1, glume,
husk of the grain, consciousness* A quick sound check
reveals much to be discerned, as with glume, which is a
singular reference for something that always seems to come
in pairs, and the clevis might be a permanent bond to envy,
once the pin is inserted, and also removing consciousness,
and replacing it with a new nicotine.
~cornea-
the transparent, convex, anterior portion of the outer
fibrous coat of the eyeball that covers the iris and the
pupil and is continuous with the sclera, Medieval Latin
cornea (tēla), horny
(tissue), from Latin corneus, horny, from cornū
~corneous-
made of horn, or a hornlike substance, horny, from Latin
corneus, from cornū,
horn ~corner-
the position at which two lines, surfaces, or edges meet and
form an angle: from the north, then east, the corner
crashed on the west bank; an area that is enclosing, or
seems bounded by angle: the teacher abjected his demeanor
by placing him in a corner; the perception of
intersection often where roads meet; a remote, secluded, or
secret place: the four corners of the earth, a beautiful
little corner of Paris; increase
in intensity by narrowing supply giving the illusion of
rarity; exclusive possession;
monopoly; a ring forming a square for
fights containing corners; see
quoin, cornerstone; a method of location by
navigation: corner market; Middle English, from
Anglo-Norman, from Old French corne, corner, horn,
from Vulgar Latin *corna, from Latin cornua,
plural of cornū, horn
~cornet-
Music: a wind instrument of the trumpet class, having
three valves operated by pistons; a piece of paper twisted
into a cone and used to hold small wares such as candy or
nuts?; a head-dress, often cone-shaped, worn by women in the
12th and 13th centuries, Middle English, from Old French,
diminutive of corn, horn, from Latin cornū
~corniculate-
having horns or hornlike projections; (see siphuncle-
tubular organ that secretes pheromone from the aphid when
attacked), Latin corniculātus,
from corniculum, diminutive of cornū, horn +
FICATION (to make, from -ficus)
~cornification-
the conversion of sqamous epithelial cells into a
keratinized, horny material, such as hair, nails, or
feathers, Latin cornū,
horn The perception of plate
is also considered as square, as formed in scales, but the
weight is uncertain.
~cornu- a
part of structure, such as a bony protuberance, that
resembles a horn, Latin cornū,
horn Greek Mythology:
The cornucopia is considered a goat's horn
overflowing with fruit, flowers, and grain, signifying
prosperity. The story is also told that the goat sucked the
life out of Zeus, and this broke off, and became filled with
fruit. In folklore, it became full of whatever the owner
desired. This is rooted in the op- in various
versions, with words such as omnium-gatherum, opera, and
also inure, and manure. It has a Pokorny of gonfalon* (sound
check: gone with the falcon, or falling con)
~corydalis-
any of the various herbs of the genus Corydalis native
chiefly to northern temperate regions and having finely
divided leaves and spurred, often yellow or pinkish flowers,
New Latin Corydalis, genus name, from Greek korudallis,
crested lark (from the shape of the flowers), from
korudos ~corymb-
Botany: a usually flat-topped flower cluster in which
the individual flower stalks grow upward from various points
of the main stem to approximately the same height, French
corymbe, from Latin corymbus,
bunch of flowers, from Greek
korumbos, head
~corynebacterium-
any of the various gram-positive, rod-shaped bacteria of a
genus Corynebacterium, which includes many animal and plant
pathogens, such as the causative agent of diphtheria (false
membrane, piece of leather), New Latin Corynēbacterium,
genus name : Greek korunē, club + bacterium
~coryphaeus-
the leader of a Greek chorus, (see coryphée-
ballet dancer who ranks above a member of the corps de
ballet and below a soloist and who performs in small
ensembles) French, from Latin coryphaeus, leader, see
cheerleader, sense 1, and also coryza-
cold, sense 3, from Greek koruza,
catarrh (mucous false membrane)
see root sreu-; stream (-rrhea) a humor in the
body, rhythm; Kyrie*
~cranium-
the skull of the vertebrate; the portion of the skull
enclosing the brain; the braincase, Middle English
craneum, from Medieval Latin cranium, from Greek
kranion Reference:
-crape jasmine- ( Tabernaemontana divaricata )
evergreen shrub native to India known for its fragrant white
flowers and named for the crinkled lobes in the corolla
-crappie- two North American sunfishes, black
crappie, and white crappie
~criosphinx-
a sphinx with the head of a ram, Greek krios, ram +
sphinx The mystery around the sphinx can be partially
solved by realizing the lion has taken control, and rests on
top of the man across from the desired ram who is below the
hawk. The unions depicted represent the feminine aspect,
especially the criosphinx, which cancels out the feminine
aspect in favor for the masculine one by showing the bulky
body of ram and lion overlaying each other. The depiction of
the sphinx in c. 530 B.C. (page 1734) shows a slender body
with wings, and a feminine head. The front legs are that of
a lion, and the body is more of that of a dog or wolf with a
triple curly tail.
|
|
-flügelhorn2-
Music: a bugle horn with valves, similar to the
cornet but having a wider bore, German : Flügel,
flank (from its use to summon flanks during battle) from
Middle High German ulügel, wing, flank, (see
pleu-) + Horn, horn (from Middle High German, from
Old High German The root
pleu- is about the flood, and is rather large
with two Pokorny's. The first is sensed as
heavier-than-air*, but the second tells a possible inner
story, and that of a hedgehog*, or even a hedgehyssop,
and a flankstone or spirit that is being used by a possible
secret plutocracy, of which would be no surprise at all to
anyone with a brain. The hurrying and bustling back and
forth has become the flutter for a lost spirit who is unable
to fly. So it seems that the mapping under study is
manipulated across the bottom as the top. This may also have
something to do with the Exodus, and the burning hedgerow
between the land and sea, also the land of milk and honey,
but this one seems more myriad. This brings to mind that
cats love feathers, and dogs love emotions.
~hart-
a male deer, especially a male deer over five years old,
Middle English, from Old English heorot
It looks like this hero rot has been written about before
by Milton Lorenz Hart (1895-1943), an American lyricist
whose songs inspired "The Lady is a Tramp", "My Funny
Valentine" and "Blue Moon", which sounds just like her. It
was Moss Hart (1904-1961), an American librettist, who with
George Kaufman wrote a Broadway comedy called "The Man Who
Came to Dinner".
~hartebeest-
any of the various large African antelopes of the genus
Alcelaphus, characterized by a reddish-brown coat and
ringed, outward-curving horns, Obsolete Afrikaans, from
Middle Dutch, variant of hertebeest : hert,
deer; see ker1- + beest,
beast (from Old French beste; see BEAST)
The heart of the beast is that of the lie, and false
knowledge, so this bond has been long in use.
~horn-
one of the hard, usually permanent structures projecting
from the head of mammals and fish, such as the narwhal or
kingfisher, consisting of a bony core covered with a sheath
of keratinous material; a hard protuberance; antler; a
container, such as a powder horn, made from a animal horn;
horn of plenty; cornucopia; either of the ends of a new
moon (opposite of neap tide; new moon and full moon);
the point of an anvil; the pommel of a saddle; an ear
trumpet; loudspeaker; a hollow, metallic electromagnetic
transmission antenna with a circular or rectangular cross
section; Music: a wind instrument, such as a trombone
or tuba; a French horn; a wind instrument such as a
saxophone or trumpet, used in playing jazz; an electrical
signaling device that produces a loud, resonate sound: train
horn; to join without being invited; Slang:
telephone, Middle English, from Old English
Propaganda: Horn- to
economize. on the horns of a dilemma,
faced with two equally undesirables
~hornblende-
an amphibolic mineral, CaNa(Mg,Fe)4(Al,Fe,Ti)3Si6O22(OH,F)2,
commonly green to bluish green to black in color formed in
the late stages of cooling in igneous rock, German : Horn,
horn (from Middle High German horn, from Old High German) +
Blende, blende, see BLENDE
~hornet-
any of the various large stinging wasps of the family
Vespidae, chiefly of the genera Vespa and
Vespula, that characteristically build large papery
nests, Middle English hornet, alteration (probably
influenced by horn, horn, see HORN) of hernet,
from Old English hyrnet
~keratin- a tough, insoluble protein substance that is
the chief structural constituent of hair, nails, horns, and
hoofs, Greek keras, kerat-, horn + -IN Teeth are
classified differently, as dentin, a calcareous inner
core, as calx, from Latin lime, limestone,
pebble, from Khalix, pebble. So it may be that when
teeth are grown, great heat or power is manifested to
produce them, and the first human growth is a failure, or
possibly some type of lesson. Fish can grow new ones, while
most of mammal life grows one set.
~kerato-
prefix, or keret- or cerato- or
cerat-, Horn, horny: keratosis; Cornea:
keratectomy; Greek kerato-, horn, from keras,
kerat- ~lamellicorn-
of or belonging to the superfamily Lamellibranchia,
including the scarabs and other beetles that have
club-shaped, mamellate antennae, from New Latin Lāmellicornia,
superfamily name : LAMELLI- (small thin plate; vascular
canal or bivalve) + Latin cornū, horn
~longicorn-
see long-horned beetle, Having long antennae or belonging to
the family Cerambycidae, which includes the
long-horned beetles, from New Latin Longicornia,
former group name : Latin longus, long; see longitude
+ Latin cornū, horn
Longitude is measured as angular
distance by addressing it perpendicularly, as east to west
by Greenwich in (hour, minute, and second) increments. The
root del-1- was getting close, but
not yet complete. It includes linger and Lent, and its
Pokorny is the Black flag* ~migraine- a severe,
recurring headache, usually affecting only one side of the
head, characterized by sharp pain and often accompanied by
nausea, vomiting, and visual disturbances, also called
megrim or megrims (depression or unhappiness): "If
these megrims are the effect of Love, thank Heaven, I never
knew what it was." (Samuel Richardson - AHD), Middle
English, from Old French, from Late Latin hēmicrānia,
from Greek hēmikrania : hēmi-, hemi- +
kranion, head The
migration is considered (non-permanent), and the
emigrated, that which leaves, such as the scientists who
left Nazi Germany. Immigrate describes the move
relative to the destination, as emotions arriving before you
do. ~Monoceros-
a constellation near Canis Major and Canis Minor, Middle
English, unicorn, from Old French, from Latin, from Greek
monokerōs,
having one horn : mono-,
mono- (pseudomonad or opportunistic pathogen needing food, men-4- frijol*, fructose*)
+ keras, horn In the
lie, the Major may always want to be more serious as a ploy
of false credibility, and serves as the eggfruit. The Minor
may even have to wear a gas mask or canister, and wonders if
the Major can read. In this dog days analogy subjected, the
return to sender doesn't work, as the jackal or Major will
always take the Tisaphone by the tail (attempting to be in
the midzone, or offset), in order to be the dachshund1
forcing the Minor into looking like
anguish and anger is the Minor's burden. This move presents
illusion, and lives on the lie. See the study group
"Removing the masks of the Furies" at the bottom of the home
page: www.euthenist.org
~olecranon2- the large process of the upper end of the
ulna that projects behind the elbow joint and forms the
point of the elbow, Greek ōlekranon :
ōlenē, elbow, (see el-;ell2,
cubit, cedarbird*) + kranion, skull, head
~reindeer-
a large deer (Rangifer tarandus) of the Arctic and
northern regions of Eurasia and North American, having
branched antlers in both sexes, Middle English reindeer
: Old Norse hreinn, reindeer + Middle English der,
animal;
Suffixed
form *kr-ei-, Old Norse- hreinn, reindeer,
Germanic- *hraina- It seems true, the
reindeer was added to the deer, and the word history
confirms this was done in a composed work around 1400. The
prefix rein- has nothing to do with reins, or straps,
rather more likely to do with reincarnation, as Rheims is
close by, and this is in close association with Rhea, which
is the mother of just about everyone, and the 13th satellite
surrounding Saturn, also stigmatized to envy.
~rhinoceros-
any of several large, thick-skinned, herbivorous mammals of
the family Rhinocerotidae, of Africa and Asia,
having one or two up-right horns on the snout, Middle
English rinoceros, from Latin rhīnocerōs,
from Greek rhinokerōs : rhino-, rhino- +
keras, horn
~rinderpest-
a recorded viral contagion representing ulcerations of the
alimentary tract that results in diarrhea, observed mostly
in cattle, German : Rinder, genitive plural of
Rind, head of cattle, ox (from Middle High German
Pest, plague (from Latin pestis) The rind
is supposedly like a coating on cheese or bacon, but also
surrounds the tangerine, and can be peeled. The
rinforzando is a sudden musical strengthening, or
re-enforcement. Some believe a spiral staircase re-enforces
itself and this may be expressed by Mary Roberts Rinehart
(1876-1958) who wrote "The Ciruclar Staircase" (1908),
however, this is structurally untrue, as it is the band that
performs this task by encircling the pole with infinite and
consistent connections.
~saveloy-
implant, highly season blood
flesh from pigs, alteration of obsolete French
cervelat, from Italian
cervellato,
ultimately from dialectal zervello,
brain, from Latin cerebellum, diminutive of cerebrum,
brain ~serval-
a long-legged wild cat (Felix serval) of Africa,
having a tawny coat with black spots and large erect ears
without tufts, French, from Portuguese (lobo) cerval,
deerlike (wolf), lynx, from Late Latin cervālis,
from Latin cervus, deer
The word servile is defined as
"abjectly submissive" or slave, and the cat described is
also a wolf, and also a deer. The jaded womanless doctrine
of Trinity consists of the Father, the Son, and the Holy
Ghost. We also sit in the lexicon between the serpent and
the sesqui, which is rooted to
sem-1- immanentism* With
this in mind, the myriad of action may be related
principally to the confusion in the tower, and to create the
ghost of preferred location as a false signal.
~sirdar1- a consideration of great
value, especially in India, Hindi sardār, from
Persian : sar, head, see ker-1 + dār, holder,
see
dher- bulrush (48)
It seems the sire polka
partner is rooted to sen- which represents the
implicit function*, which may have much to do with
the Dog Star, Sothis, where knowledge coming into the brain
and its experience must be manipulated first, before
assuming it is valid, as the observer is inferior, and
precious.
~triceratops1- herbivorous dinosaur of the genus
Triceratops,
of the Cretaceous Period, having a bony plate covering the
neck, a large horn above either eye, and a smaller horn on
the nose, New Latin Triceratops, genus name : Greek
tri-,
tri- + Greek keras, kerat-, horn, see ker-1- + Greek
ōps, eye, face, see
okw-
gmt (44)
Some food for thought between the two tops, the other is two
orders of three, and the inveigle Major eating itself, in
perpetual mutany. This one brings to mind the trouble it
takes just to eat vegetables.
~tricorn-
a hat worn with a brim turned up on three sides; having
three horns, corners, or projections, French tricorne,
from Latin tricornis, three-horned : tri-,
tri- + cornū, horn
A word of caution on this one, as the
nest of envy* has been located
nearby in the root kost- which is a trail from
tricostate, or having three costae. According the urban
legend, this is where they cook your head like an apple or a
costard punch.
-unicorn2-
a fabled creature symbolic of purity or possibly virginity,
and usually represented as a horse with single straight
spiraled horn projecting from its forehead, Heraldry:
a representation of this beast, having a horse's body, a
stag's legs, a lion's tail, and a straight spiraled horn
growing from its forehead, especially employed an an emblem
by supporters of a Royal Arms associated with Great Britain
or of Scotland, Astronomy: the constellation
Monoceros, Middle English unicorne, from Old French,
from Late Latin ūnicornis, from
Latin, having one horn : ūnus, one, see oi-no-
+ cornū, horn The
oi-no- root is the other half of the einkorn, and
the first universe, as the second believes there are two. It
is also the crazy "one left (beyond 10)", and the number
eleven, while also representing the first letter of the
alphabet A-1, and the twelfth of a unit, or 1/12. This
routes to page 281 and the canoe birch*, and is being
cooked without paddling. In
ending this chapter, it is dedicated to Herbie and my
birthday which is Tuesday in which I'll be 53. Here is a
list of the twelve herbs collected up this chapter that will be
loaded at
www.euthenist.org
Jojoba, Chia, Caprifig, Caper,
Corneilian cherry, Cornflower, Corydalis, Cranberry, Lamb's
quarters, Hyacinth, Unicorn plant, and Papaw
For added reading, and review of this
section, it was decided over last weekend to round up
Jacob's ladder and the story of Jacob, which includes Joseph
contained in the King James Holy Bible from approximately
chapter 28 of Genesis. I will consider this addition the
beginning of the possibility of a large paperback that will
be developed over time once a volume and tone is determined.
See
here. I will attempt
only to follow the stones that have been brought to
light in this chapter, but cannot determine of they can be
followed in sequence, as it must be based on the group, and
must be felt in the color arrangement.
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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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