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Revelation 21:21
And the twelve gates were twelve pearls: every
several gate was of one pearl: and the street of
the city was pure gold, as it were transparent glass.
Chapter Forty one: Earth Séance
- The Role Ahead
"If there is hope. . . .it lies in the
proles" (George Orwell - AHD)
"Follow the sacred stone journey through the sun past into
the Seventh House, Libra, ziba.anna.
This journey will end
in
Aquarius,
and the
perverse and rebellious Uranus,
and
then,
you'll be ready to go again,
"vote for me", the
beast says."
Oct. 02, 2008: After reading a recent
Connecting the Dots article, it seemed appropriate to
state that our world is in control of some extremely crazy
people, and it seems their desire is to remove religion from the
face of the earth. This feeling of religion is more about the
tree of life than one may want to believe, in that religion is
life, and to remove it, would be to remove life, and this is why
it must be free, and also gives the reader an idea of how
confusing the issues have become, and the affair between
religion and knowledge seems at the heart of discourse.
To update the reader, an attempt again to upgrade the work
is in progress, whereby, the least amount of changes will be
applied to the remaining work so that the previous can be
brought up to the current production, and to also begin to
construct certain aspects of the work so that it can be
reviewed, or presented along with the geometry, etc. This is
very challenging, and it is currently a desert economically,
so it is uncertain as to specifics. To get you reading, here
is a key group that has much to do with reading, and how
nature's tree of knowledge has become a wall of transparent
glass, and the city of gold may have been hidden in the edges of the
relief.
Part one: Fahrenheit
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6-labellum-labial-labium-labret-labrum-lip-et-leb-
lip, Old English lippa, lip, Germanic- *lep-,
Variant form *lab-, suffixed form *lab-yo-,
LABIAL, LABIUM, Latin labium, lip, suffixed form
*lab-ro-, LABELLUM, LABRET, LABRUM, Latin- labrum,
lip, Fahrenheit* |
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~labellum- the often enlarged petal of an orchid
flower; liplike parts associated with insects; proboscis,
Latin, diminutive of labrum, lip
The classification for what are known
as (flowers) begins with the designation sepal, which
is one of the separate, usually green parts forming the
calyx of a flower first noticed when observing them. The
sepal often has a long leg or stem where two primary classes
are designated. The man's house begins with the
stamens inclusive of the anthers and
filaments. The woman's house is the pistil
which includes the stigma, style, ovary, and even
petals. Below this is the receptacle, or better yet,
the sepal beginning. However, there also exist four other
descriptions pertaining to sepals, see if you can figure out
what they mean as I have attempted to correlate them with
the houses.
Calyx-
the sepals of a flower considered as a group, Latin
calyx, calyx-, from Greek kalux
Corolla- petals of a flower considered a
group or unit, Latin, small garland, diminutive of
corōna, garland
Corona- crown shaped, funnel shaped, or trumpet
shaped perianth outgrowth or appendage (example:
daffodil, spider lily), Latin corōna
Perianth- the outer envelope of a flower,
consisting of either the calyx or corolla, or both,
French périanthe, from New Latin perianthum
: Greek peri-, around, see (per-2-
halo (31) ) + Greek
anthos, flower |
~labial-
of or related to the lips or labia; Linguistics:
articulated mainly by closing or partly closing the lips, as
the sounders (b), (m) labial harmony, or (w) labial
consonant, or flue in rhythmic vibration, Medieval Latin
labiālis, from Latin labium, lip, [ref: flue-
air passage as in an organ containing a lip inside that
causes vibration, also labialize- rounding the sound in
vowels]
On possible way to keep from
slipping would be to remove the slipper, then the labelers
will be detected and knowledge seeps through. The alphabet
infolds upon itself with the constant within the rhythm, and
the endless variables we compute. Here are five to study and
track to other sections. ( labio- prefix,
labial)
-labiodental- Linguistics:
articulation with the lower lip and upper teeth, as in the
sounder (f) and (v)
-labionasal- Linguistics: simultaneous labial and
velar
-labiovelar- Linguistics: simultaneous labial and
velar, as (kw) in quick
-velar- retraction of the tongue, using the soft
palate, as in (g) in good, or (k) in cup
-velamen- Botany: spongy, multiple epidermis
that covers the aerial roots of epiphytic orchids and
certain other plants capable of absorbing atmospheric
moisture, Latin covering, from vēlāre, to cover, from
vēlum, a covering
~labium-
Botany: one of the liplike divisions of a labiate
corolla, (example: snapdragon); also see Labiatae
(mint family), Zoology: the inner openings of a
gastropod shell; Anatomy: any of the four folds of
tissue of the female external genitalia, Latin, lip, [ref:
polka partner lablab- hyacinth bean, (Dolichos
lablab) of the Old World tropics, having purple or white
flowers and edible pods and seeds.]
Greek Mythology: The
Labyrinth was considered a maze in which the
Minataur was trapped or confined, as in the elaboration of
an intricate composition or construction, (example: xylem),
see inner ear (kau-
congas* (22)), and is from Greek laburinthos,
possibly akin to labrus, double-headed axe, of Lydian
origin. If it be an axe, it may be associated with the
spelling monster, as in the differences between Hades and
Hyades. Hades is the god of the netherworld
(nothing-god), uses a dispenser, and hangs out with shades
of the dead. Hyades is the five daughters of
Atlas and the sister of Pleiades, placed by Zeus among the
stars. It is also a cluster of stars in the constellation
Taurus, the five brightest of which form a V, supposed by
ancient astronomers to indicate rain when they rose with the
sun, Latin, from Greek Huades. The double-headed axe
may also have caused the death of Hyacinthus, a
beautiful youth that was loved, but accidentally killed by
Apollo, however, Apollo's blood still caused the hyacinth to
grow. From this sprang one of three parts, the larkspur, the
gladiolus, or the iris. (peter-
havelocks (34)) The
hyacinth is also
known as the jacinth, which also happens to be
the eleventh stone mentioned in Revelation Chapter 21, verse
20. This Mediterranean plant (Hyacinthus oreintalis)
with narrow leaves, terminal racemes, and funnel-shapes
arrives in
various colors growing wild, from Greek huakinthos,
wild hyacinth.
Before jumping out of the mythical
laboratory, this complete group of words rests under the
labdanum, a resin of certain Old World plants in
the genus Cistus, yielding a fragrant essential oil
used for flavorings and perfumes. It is from Middle English,
from Medieval Latin lapdanum, labdanum, an alteration
of Latin lādanum, from Greek lēdanon, from
lēdon, rockrose, of Semitic origin; akin to Akkadian
ladunu. The rockrose contains the genus Cistus or
Helianthemum having small roselike yellow, white, or
reddish flowers. The moss rose is a variety of rose (Rosa
centifolia) native to the Caucasus, having fragrant pink
flowers used as a source of attar, and the rose moss is a
moss of the genus Rhodobryum, especially R. roseum,
characterized by conspicuous terminal leaf rosettes. The
genus Portulaca, especially P.
grandiflora of Southern America is tagged to the
rose moss, and is a flower that only opens in sunlight, and
is a member of
per-2-
halo (31)
Mount Cithaeron was sacred to Dionysus
and the Muses, and it was Apollo again who is seen holding a
cithara (polka partner to Cithaeron) which is then
labeled a lyre, but it looks to be a bazaar looking
contraption which might resemble the inner ear, or possibly
relate to the rosin which comes in various forms,
such as the rosinweed, which is any of the genera
Grindelia or Silphium, especially the compass
plant, and the gum plant, having a resinous juice.
~labret-
an ornament inserted into a perforation in the lip, Latin
labrum, lip
~labrum-
a lip or liplike structure such as the one forming the roof
of the mouth in insects; the outer margins of the opening of
the gastropod shell, Latin, lip, [ref: gastropod-
mollusk, class Gastropoda]
~lip-
Anatomy: either of two fleshy folds that surround the
opening of the mouth; stigma for anther; a structure of part
that encircles or bounds the orifice, as: 1) Anatomy:
a labium; 2) either of the margins of the aperture of a
gastropod shell; 3) a rim, as a vessel, bell, or crater; 4)
a barrier on the body that is broken that immediately
designates the type of possible repairs, (curl out -
stitch); Botany: one of the two divisions of blabiate
corolla or calyx, as in the snapdragon, or the
modified upper petal of an orchid flower; the tip of a
pouring spout, as on a pitcher; to kiss with the lips;
Middle English, from Old English lippa
The lipid is anything that resembles fat
which in itself does not seem soluble in water, but is
soluble through more organic processing. The Apache are
known for a tribe by the name of Lipan, which
is a language of the Apachean.
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Part two: Duma Duma
revised: (April 20, 2009)
57-alexia-analects-analogous-anthology-apologue-apology-catalog-colleague-collect
-decalogue2-delegate-diligent-dialect-dyslexia-eclectic-elect-epilogue-homologous
-horologe2-intelligent-lectern-lecture-leech1-legacy-legal-legate-legend-legible-legion
-legislator2-legist-legitimate-lesson-lex-lexicon-ligneous-ligni-logarithm2-logic-logion
-logistic-logo-logos-logue-logy-loyal-neglect2-paralogism-prelect-privilege2
-prolegomenon-prologue-relegate-sacrilege-select2-sortilege1-syllogism-leg-
to collect, with derivatives meaning "to speak", LEECH1, Old
English- læce, physician,
Germanic- *lekjaz, enchanter, one who speaks magic
words, perhaps from leg-; LECTERN, (LECTION),
LECTURE, LEGEND, LEGIBLE, LEGION, LESSON; (COIL1), COLLECT1,
DILIGENT, ELECT, INTELLIGENT, NEGLECT, PRELECT, SACRILEGE,
SELECT, SORTILEGE, Latin- legere, to gather, choose,
pluck, read; LEXICON, LOGION, -LOGUE, -LOGY, ALEXIA,
ANALECTS, ANTHOLOGY, CATALOG, DIALECT, (DIALOGUE), DYSLEXIA,
ECLECTIC, HOROLOGE, PROLEGOMENON, Greek- legein, to
gather, speak, with logos, speech, (see *log-o-);
Suffixed form *leg-no, LIGNEOUS, LIGNI-, Latin-
lignum, wood, firewood, (< "that which is gathered");
Possibly lengthened-grade form *lēg-; LEGAL, LEGIST,
LEGITIMATE, LEX, LOYAL; LEGISLATOR, PRIVILEGE, Latin- lēx,
law (< "collection of rules"); LEGACY, LEGATE, COLLEAGUE,
(COLLEGIAL), DELEGATE, RELEGATE, from Latin
denominative
lēgāre, to depute, commission, charge, (< "to engage by
contract"; but possibly from legh-); Suffixed
o-grade form *log-o-, LOGIC, LOGISTIC, LOGO-, LOGOS,
-LOGY, ANALOGOUS, APOLOGUE, APOLOGY, DECALOGUE, EPILOGUE,
HOMOLOGOUS, LOGARITHM, PARALOGISM, PROLOGUE, SYLLOGISM,
Greek- logos, speech, word, reason, duma duma* (decalogue1
- dekm-) (horologe1
- yēr-) (leech2
- leig-) (legislator1
- telæ-) (logarithm1
- ar-) (neglect1
- ne-) (privilege1
- per-1-) (select1
- s(w)e-) (sortilege2
- ser-2-) |
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~alexia- loss of the ability to read, often
recorded as brain lesions, also called word blindness,
(A-1 + Greek lexis, speech (from legein, to
speak), [ref: ia-1-, suffix, disease,
and A-1, prefix, without, not] To begin, we
have a serious problem related to this definition. The
prefixed a- in reference is of the ne-
root group and represents "not" but also a seeming form of
nihilism, and when you add this to lexis,
which is that which separates itself from morphology, or is
regarded as lingo, and then add disease to the
end of it, you really have a word that makes no sense. Cars
are sold as words it seems, and to help keep people from
reading, which is a key link in evolutionary growth. This
disease is much more wide spread as a subtle propaganda
which is helpfully programmed for only its benefit it seems
with images that may be overriding thought itself.
~analects-
(possible implant) the masking of analogy where (collecting
the data) is subtly feeding all the way down through the
maze into everyday speech, becoming lingo duplicity using
the sound it seems of legion, which is strictly a military
term. The analemma is the sundial of which designates
that which is taken up, but it is also gathered and
reformed. From Greek analekta, selected things, from
neuter plural of anakektos, gathered together, from
analegein, to gather : ana-, (upward,
backward) + legein, to gather
It seems obvious that our language is gathered, and the
use of others words is probably rampart, then, this
advances to the next level, where others words are
used to a degree where the value is removed for personal
benefit, and in the end, what does the analect look like, or
can you even find it? And the true analogies that are built
come with great effort, and the collection is about art in
that connection; so this may be completely unrecognizable to the
gatherers for collections.
~analogous-
the ability to communicate using a form of navigation where
the mind must be used in a particular way that requires
thinking about (connections) similar to the way words work
when they are read, but also considering backwards, up, and
down, or possibly other methods of thinking, from Latin
analogus, from Greek analogos, proportion :
ana-, (in harmony, anew) + logos, proportion
Again, the diction stated that analogous was
similar in function but not in
structure and evolutionary origin. This is completely
senseless, as structure is a part of all analogies as
navigation, and this navigation is evolution. Also see the
root an-; acknowledge, anlage, and
legh-,
dragnet, lair, lie, false seal, phantom*
~anthology-
a collection of literary pieces, such as poems, short
stories, or plays; a miscellany, an assortment, or a
catalog, as of complaints, comments, or ideas, Medieval
Greek anthologia, collection of epigrams, from Greek,
flower gathering, from anthologein, to gather flowers
: antho- + logos, a gathering (from legein, to
gather)
The collection of epigrams that are actually witty, or
seem paradoxical are often the essence of the analogy even
so subtly applied. But discerning how to make your own
flower may in itself not be the true purpose, it may more of
the epicalyx, which is subtending the path being made.
~apologue-
(possible implant) the telling of a story as a
moral fable, especially that of
inanimate objects, or animals as characters, French, from
Latin apologus, from Greek apologos : apo-
(without) + logos, speech
The prefix apo- is in need of careful scrutiny, as
we know this is a marker for the alphabet group apo-,
and here we have the essence of a message in the midst being
applied so that messages can be sent on any desired
wavelength, and the mentioning of the word moral makes for
possible implantation and operation. Even though the stories
are loved, it may be inappropriate to classify them in this
manner, and seems to be avoiding the anthology
and analogous elements.
~apology-
the act of the apologue, could be just an excuse, or
complete propaganda designed to distract attention away from
the divisions between critical reason, creative-intuitive,
and/or to benefit; a forming of a defense in the form of
verbal justification; evidence (often not provided),
inferior substitute, Latin apologia, from Greek :
apo- (without) + logos, speech
The prefix apo- also has the meaning of "away
from" which may be associated directly with emotions, and
the fact they are not being checked, they are being possibly
muted in effect avoiding the resolution of the actual
differences. The fact that people must constantly be in
business of apologetics, only means that everyone is
incapable of getting along which is not really being
discerned, and this seems prevalent and instigated no doubt
without the catalog of emotions discerned.
~catalog-
card catalog; Library; a
publication such as a book or diary; Blog;
descriptive data applied to book format as a helpful guide;
index: "The long catalogue of his concerns:
unemployment, housing, race, drugs, the decay of the inner
city, the environment and family life." (Anthony
Holden - AHD); a collection of lists?, Middle English
cathaloge, list, register, from Old French catalogue,
from Late Latin catalogus, from Greek katalogos,
from katalegein, to list : kata-, down, off,
see CATA- + legein, to count
Take a look at how your brain works, up and down that is:
ana-, (upward, backward) + legein, which is
analect, and means to gather. So in one, your up
and gathering, the other, down and counting, but both going
backwards strangely as both cata- (down) and ana-
(up)
also mean "backwards". This could literally mean there
exists analects walking around
who only know of the unknown know per se, or the false seal
of reality that may be manifested, and they may continually
duplicate to hide their creations. Believe it or not, the
image of the strange lady and her shadow behind Anubus and
his wife (discussed in last chapter) is this exact
description, as she stands with her arms in the air and
reversed, her mini shadow holds her perpendicular. She also
has the strange connective devices hanging from her arms
that also connect the pole and scales in mid air.
~colleague-
(evision) an associate or
partner who has an (allotment of the ponderous) in that it
allows the double-headed axe (both
intelligence and emotions) to have peace; academic partner,
French collégue, from Latin collēga : com-
(common, shared, Greek koinos, see kom-)
+ lēgāre, to depute
References:
Depute- definition provides
error, root peu- compute,
account, hatchet man*
Ponderous- the process of
weight, root (s)pen-; appendix, Latin
pondō, by weight, keystone*
~collect-
(evision) a person who is a
colleague; receiver; gather; collection of thoughts and/or
planned order, (see collect2 Ecclesiastical), accumulation; Middle English
collecten, from Latin colligere, collēct- :
com-, com- + legere, to gather
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~decalogue2- The Ten Commandments (requires
ten commands); Biblical Mythology: fundamentalism;
rules mixed with weight, Middle English decalog, from
Late Latin decalogus, from Greek dekalogos :
deka, ten; (see dekm-) + logos,
speech, word, reason I would definitely request an
explanation as to how commands that instill the essence of
life could have been the first laws written without the
basic science that bestows them? The first question to ask
is where did the know how come from to calculate law in the
first place? Evidently, the very laws of nature it seems
somehow transformed into language with symbols that became
friends and enemies, and obviously would have to come prior
but easily elaborated as shown by nature itself.
~delegate-
(evision) movement of the gate;
dispatch; subordination of
favors for paid debt; dashing impingement; classification of
government affairs or selected individuals who may represent
others as appointed representatives who can influence the
selectees (officials elected), however, they are not voting
members of the House of Representatives; House of
Delegates: the lower house of Maryland, Virginia, or
West Virginia legislature, Middle English delegat,
from Medieval Latin dēlēgātus,
from past participle of dēlēgāre,
to dispatch : de-, de- + lēgāre, to send?
Latin denominative
lēgāre, to depute, commission, charge, (< "to engage by
contract"; but possibly from legh-);
dragnet, lair, lie, false seal, phantom*
A few of the definitions provided for dispatch are:
to put to death; sent with speed;
dispose of; and eat up, but
its possible real meaning is the dashing of children's lives
against the walls or chambers of freedom as a form of haste,
and greed. Next door is the word dispel, which has a
root pel-5-, which is the anvil, and the compellation of the
heart or interpossession.
~diligent-
marked by perseverance; painstaking effort, Middle English,
from Old French, from Latin dīligēns,
dīligent-, present participle of dīligere, to
esteem, love : dī-, dis-, apart; see DIS- +
legere, to choose, [ref:
assiduous- root sed-; supersede, chair,
cathedra, jacinth*]
References:
Senate- root sen-; senescent, senile, 907,
implicit function*
Sense- root sent-; scent, sentient, "to go
mentally", 908, impression* (Warning: feelings, gate
movement*)
The prefix dis- mostly
represents the opposite (not), or the absence of, but
it can also represent freedom from, or asunder,
which leads to believe to be diligent, is to be free from
outweighing knowledge over feelings, or vice versa. For the
psychopath, the painstaking effort comes in the form of
discharge, or the
release of negative energy using the (not), or (nothing-god)
emulation. The discharge seems like a diseased patch that is
moved around based on the precocious nature of greed.
~dialect-
the creative leg or branch of a language that seems fixed by
location, culture, or the formations of art; the detection
of inner mediation in the language system; speech patterns;
linguistic geography: panhandle; expression in the
languages or the arts: ventriloquy ; discourse;
French dialecte, from Old French, from Latin
dialestus, form of speech, from Greek dialektos,
speech, from dialegesthai, to discourse, use a
dialect : dia-, between, over: see DIA- +
legesthai, middle voice of legein, to speak,
Synonyms: vernacular (first conception), jargon
(personalized by nest), cant (stock phrases), argot
(underworld), lingo (applications), patois (without
tradition or creole)
Much is said about the Marxian philosophy in this section
of the dictionary, although the definition labeling of
dialectical materialism is misleading, as it tags matter
and material to each other, and seemingly forces the
physician into play without considering dimensions, or
states of being beyond matter itself where conflict or
constant are yet to be fully understood. The discussions
around contradictions are seemingly coherent for the
discourse versus debates masked as debates.
Reference: dialectic-
Greek dialektikē (tekhnē),
(art of) debate, from dialektos, speech, conversation
~dyslexia-
(psychopath brace) the
inability to understand and comprehend written words which
may manifest into a disease that is undetected, New Latin
DYS- (evil, see dus-) + Greek lexis, speech
(from legein, to speak
The list of words with the prefix dys- is rather
long, yet the sounder is that of dis- which creates
possible problems where the use of (bad, evil) are applied
in strange ways directly to a problem as though the problem
is evil, where this may not be truthful, as the problem is
caused by something else. It is as though, to discern is
nullified by other sounders that hide the essence of our
minds. It is also strange that we must have two words that
basically describe the same meaning, or it may be that one
or the other has been created so that we could figure out
the puzzle. Whatever, the case, it raises questions as to
why there are two versions. see alexia above
~eclectic-
selecting or manufacturing individual elements from a
variety of sources, systems, or styles: celestial sphere;
made up of or combining elements from a variety of sources:
solar system; one that follows methods;
éclaircissement, Greek
eklektikos, selective, from eklektos, selected,
from eklegein, to select : ek-, out; see ECTO-
+ legein, to gather
The prefix ECTO- is with the root
eghs-, and this may be thought of as collecting
strange, as this seems evident simply because of
echolalia, or the subtle invasion of it; eclampsia which is
shinning forth but also convulsions, and the ecliptic that
means "failing to appear" and is used to describe an
imaginary (ecliptic plane) where the earth is upon it
circling the sun in an imaginary celestial sphere.
reference: eclipse- root leikw-;
ellipsis, loan, delinquent,
relinquish, "two left" beyond ten; feedbag*]
~elect- (improper
label) to make a valid selection
on a paper ballot only, that is accounted for
that a member of representation of the people may operate
under the promotion of the people within the
International guidelines of
peace;
choice;
Middle English electen, from Latin
ēligere, ēlēct-, to
select : ē-, ex-, (out, see eghs-) +
legere, to choose, [ref: ex-, prefix,
outside of, not, former]
In America, to vote in a so-called (election) does leave
the feeling of being outside of, and former, or as a former
citizen who had rights that have been removed. It seems that
select was shortened, and the representatives no longer are
sane, quite simply, the promotion opposite the people has
manifested, and should be changed soon, but there still
exists the machines. It seems to ring in the story of the
Echo in Greek mythology, a nymph whose unrequiting love for
Narcissus caused her to pine away until nothing but her
voice remained which only echoed the misery of a lost
country.
~epilogue-
a short poem or speech spoken directly to an
audience following the conclusion of a play; a short
conclusion at the end of a literary work, often dealing with
a future element related to the characters portrayed in the
play, in this sense, also called afterword, Middle
English epiloge, from Old French epilogue, from Latin
epilogus, from Greek epilogos, conclusion of a
speech : epi-, epi- + logos, word, [ref:
epi-, prefix, root epi-; behind, at
the back, oblast; charmed particle*]
~homologous-
corresponding or similar in position, value, structure, or
function; Biology: similar in structure and
evolutionary origin, though not necessarily in function,
(examples: the flippers of a seal as compared to the hands
of homo-sapiens); Immunology:
relating to or correspondence between an antigen and the
antibody produced in response to it; Genetics: having
the same morphology and linear sequence of gene loci as
another chromosome; Chemistry: belonging to or being
a series of organic compounds each successive member of
which differs from the preceding member by a constant
increment, especially by an added CH2 group, from Greek homo-logos, agreeing :
homo-, homo- + logos, word,
proportion The art of playing mother nature goes beyond
sense with the body, for the research of the anti-antigen
world is to sell drugs to pamper diseases where the cause is
never addressed, in a form of madness where the research is
for ways to learn how to break down these systems and
control them. If the research was to offer free life giving
remedies straight from nature itself, and how to obtain and
grow the necessary life giving gifts of mother earth, it
would be quite different.
~horologe2- 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 The observation of
time can be perceived not just by the measurement alone, but
by other methods, as in the horoscope which is only an
observer of time, but this is not looking straight at
the dial of the analemma or the clock. The yēr-
root group contains the word hour, and year,
and Julius Pokorny leaves us with 1 on page 293 which is
intriguing but also confusing, with the word carotin or
carotid sinus. This leads to carotene, an orange or red
pigment C40H56 found in both animal and plant in which the
liver converts to Vitamin A.
~intelligent-
mentally capable both in learning ability and emotional
stability; inphase; capable of logical choice;
proem; Computer Science: capable of data storage
and processing, Latin intelligēns,
intelligent-, present participle of intellegere,
intelligere, to perceive : inter-, inter- + to
choose, [ref: inter-, prefix, between,
among, in the midst of, within, mutual, reciprocal, root
en-; introse, centerfold*]
Reference essay:
Definitions: The Intelligentsia
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| ~lectern-
a wooden platform or stand used for various purposes such as:
killing whales, obtaining a view of the projected path at sea
(pulpit), reading messages saved, and
electuary administration; church service, Middle English
lettorne, lectorn, from Old French lettrum,
from Medieval Latin lēctrum,
from Latin lēctus, past participle of legere,
to read
References:
Lectin- glycoproteins, conjugation, root yeug-;
yoga, Yuga, justapose, destabilize*
note: this root group is
having problems, and their seems no positive outlooks so far.
~lecture-
an exposition or possibly a recital; lector; that which
rank or tenure allows instruction; profession; the
profession of authority; university; a foundation of
authority; college, Middle English, a reading, from Old
French, from Medieval Latin lēctūra,
form Latin lēctus, past participle of legere,
to read
The diction keeps fading away on the
fact of reading, and what it may actually mean, as reading is
occurring during any lecture, that is to say, not on a page, in
the mind, and reading never ceases at any point in time unless
you are completely dead, and then the body would ceased to
accompany the reader. In Greek mythology,
Leda was a queen of Sparta and the mother, by Zeus in
the form of a swan, of Helen and Pollux and by her husband
Tyndareus, of Castor and Clytemnestra, also the tenth satellite
of of the planet Jupiter.
~leech2-
leech1: any of the various chiefly aquatic
bloodsucking or carnivorous annelid worms of the class Hirudinea,
of which one species (Hirudo medicinalis) was formerly used by
physicians to bleed patients; one that preys on or clings to
another; a parasite; that which drains the resources of another,
Middle English leche, physician, leech, from
læce; see leg-;
leech2-
Nautical: either vertical edge of a square sail; the after
edge of a fore-and-aft-sail, Middle English leche,
probably Middle Low German līk,
leech line, see root leig-; From listing
above: Latin
denominative
lēgāre, to depute, commission, charge, (< "to engage by
contract"; but possibly from legh-);
Whoops. Looks like it is from leig-,
not legh-, and the claim to
lēgāre has converted to a new meaning
"to bind" provided in the leig- listing, and rests
with the tag (religion), and to boot, this is navigated straight
to the Federal Reserve System, or
the idea whereby a separation is implanted into the system as a
form of protection from the system itself so that it can feed
from it without harm to itself, similar to the way a leech
works. Churches also benefits from this leeching as tax free
entities when everyone else is forced into slavery.
~legacy-
something that is considered to have value that is handed down
from an ancestor or a predecessor or from the past; heritage;
will; Middle English legacie, office of a deputy, from
Old French, from Medieval Latin lēgātus,
past participle of
lēgāre, to depute, bequeath
The original definition of legacy was
strictly focused on money itself, yet money is a complete
abstraction of reality, and it is only knowledge that is
actually transgressing time.
~legal-
of, related to, or concerned with law: legal proceedings;
records that pertain to, or are based on law: legal documents;
authorized by the laws of the constitution: inalienable
rights; enacted by Congress: statute; documents that
summarize those rights and liberties: bill of rights;
Middle English, from Old French, from Latin
lēgālis, from lēx, lēg-. law
References:
Fiducial- faith, trust, root
bheidh-
white bullet (32)
Decree- force of law, judgments, root krei-; discern, garble,
endocrine, riddle, intolerant*
Statute- edict, corporation, root stā-; one
who stands under, pedestal, lablab*
Bequeath- hand down, root gwet-;
bequest, will, death mask*
~legate-
(legatee) a selected emissary, see pope, Middle English, from
Old French legat, from Medieval Latin lēgātus,
past participle of
lēgāre, to depute
~legend-
(evision) that which rests between
the Rosetta stone; hieroglyph; a message or story handed
down from earlier times; distinction: "The crucial
distinction between education and indoctrination" (A.
Bartlett Giamatti - AHD); a body or reference to such
collections; inscription; the inscription of myth in
romance; title; a table between the leech lines that
catches wind; symbol; a map or chart that assists in
setting a course; decipher, Middle English, from Old
French legende, from Medieval Latin (lectiō)
legenda, (lesson) to be read, from Latin, feminine gerundive
of legere, to read
~legible-
the possibility of being able to decipher; phase; discernment
application; inference, Middle English, from Late Latin
legibilis, from Latin legere, to read, [ref:
infer-
bher-1- aviatrix
(37)]
~legion-
an ancient Roman army of warriors (killers) consisting of 3,000
to 6,000 (infantry troops), and 100 to 200 (cavalry troops);
military unit; organization of those who promote militarism;
intimidation, Middle English legioun, from Old French
legion, from Latin legiō, legiōn-,
from legere, to gather
~legislator2-
one of three branches of the U.S. government including a House
of Representatives and Senators from each State in the Union
bound by liaison to the people to enact laws of the people,
French législateur, from Old
French, from Latin lēgis lātor : lēgis,
genitive of lēx, law + lātor, proposer, bearer
(from lātus, past participle of ferre, to propose,
bear, see root telæ-)
The word legislator is the root word, as
other lexeme creations are not rooted, nor do they provide root
information. The root group telæ- is a key group
for study and includes: Atlantic, elate, illation, translate,
talion, and seems to reference the long jump from one side to
the other, your brain that is.
~legist-
Attorney: lawyer; specialist in law, Middle English legiste,
from Old French, from Medieval Latin lēgista,
from Latin lēx, lēg-, law
~legitimate-
being in that the law is applicable to everyone inclusive of all
representatives; judicial; being in accordance with the
liaison of the people; legal; articulation
distinguishable from burlesque, vaudeville, and some forms of
musical comedy; genuine drama; an authorization whereby
individuals are classified according to marriage certificates in
order to protect children, but also to monitor abuse, Middle
English legitimat, born in wedlock, from Medieval Latin
lēgitimātus, past participle
lēgitimāre, to make lawful, from Latin lēgitumus,
legitimate, from lēx, lēg-, law
~lesson-
the period of life beginning at birth, and continuing until
death; period of instruction; class; experience forsaken as
assignment; reading; the act or instance of teaching;
observation, rehearsal; Middle English lessoun, from Old
French leson, from Latin lēctiō,
lēctiōn-, a reading,
from lēctus, past participle of legere, to read
~lex-
(plural leges) Law, Latin lēx,
( lexeme: fundamental units as find, found, and
finding )
~lexicon-
Linguistics: the stock of terms containing the morphemes
of a particular group; dictionary; the style or vocabulary
compiled for use; language, Medieval Latin, from Greek
lexikon (biblion), word-(book), from neuter of
lexikos, of words, from lexis, word, from legein,
to speak
~ligneous-
consisting of or having the texture of wood, from Latin
ligneus, from lignum, wood
~ligni-
or ligno-, prefix, wood, from Latin lignum,
wood, see xylem, woody tissue, Greek xulon, wood
~logarithm2- (same as ~logarithm1-) Mathematics: the power to
which a base, usually 10, must be raised to produce a given
number, (examples: if nx = a, the logarithm of
a, with n as a
base, is x; symbolically, logn a = x. Another
example, 103 = 1000; therefore log10 1000 = 3)
New Latin logarithmus : Greek logos, reason,
proportion + Greek arithmos, number, (see
ar-)
~logic- the study of principles related to reasoning,
especially of the structure of propositions and/or proportions
as distinguished from their content and of methods and validity
in deductive reasoning; logical mode; a guiding principle;
school; valid reasoning: your legislation lacks serious logic;
the relationship between elements and between an element and the
whole in a set of objects, individuals, principles, or events:
the logic in love had been segregated preventing harmony;
Computer Science: the
classification of processes of sorting, comparing, and matching,
that involves yes-no decisions; computer circuitry;
Middle English, from Old French logique, from Latin
logica, from Greek logikē (tekhnē) (art) of
reasoning, logic, feminine of logikos, of reasoning, from
logos, reason
The claim that computers can reason is a
bit much. So we have the use of actual logic to create computers
now seeming to move, or attempting to. Yes and no, are not
reasons, but only decisions, and they may always be illogical.
It is also claimed that the computer bypasses arithmetic in
yes-no decisions, but in comparing this to the human brain, we
already know it is based in pure arithmetic, and has the ability
to reason where no computer can reach. So, we have a word that
is wrapped in reasoning tagged as something that has none
without the programmer.
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~logion-
Biblical: one of the sayings of Jesus not
recorded in the Gospels but supposed to have belonged to the
source material from which they were compiled, Greek
oracle, from legein, to speak Gospel of
Thomas: (98) Jesus said, "The kingdom of the father is
like a certain man who wanted to kill a powerful man. In his
own house he drew his sword and stuck it into the wall in
order to find out whether his hand could carry through. Then
he slew the powerful man."
Reference:
agrapha-
the sayings of Jesus not in the Bible, Greek, from neuter
plural of agraphos, unwritten : a-, not, see A-1, +
graphein, to write, see
gerbh-
concordance (26)
~logistic-
of or related to symbolic logic; logistics; (evision)
separation and study of the four quarters to calculate
balance: intellectual, emotional, spiritual, and physical;
Medieval Latin logisticus, of calculation, from Greek
logistkos, skilled in calculating, from logistēs,
calculator, from logizesthai, to calculate, from
logos, reckoning, reason, [ref: logistics-
French logistiques, from logistique, logic
(perhaps influenced by loger, to quarter), from
Medieval Latin logisticus, of calculation
~logo-
or log-, prefix, Word, speech: logogram,
Greek, from logos, speech
A logogram is also a title, such as in a newspaper:
meltdown; but it is also much more, where the secret
messages related to four parts per se, and their existing
states where adjustments, calculations, comparing, matching,
and analogies are performed, which all lead to inner
decisions or stances of belief. There are also other
maneuvers occurring related to the sounders hidden within
words, such as 4 read as "four" in English or "quattro" in
Italian, along with hundreds of others that may subtly
adjust the observer.
~logos-
Philosophy: In pre-Socratic philosophy, the principle
governing the cosmos, the source of this principle, or human
reasoning about the cosmos; (example: sophism,
Greek sophizesthai, to be subtle); the nous, a
principle identified with the power of a (god) where this is
considered the source of all activity or generation of it; (example:
stoichiometry, Greek stoikheion, element, see
steigh-); an incarnation that becomes or is
considered Word; hypostasis;
see teleology; Theology: consideration of a prologue in
Saint John's Gospel in relation to a divine wisdom;
(example: Patamos experience), Greek The word logos
itself has no root marking, but the root group above
contains: Greek- logos, speech,
word, reason; so it may be said that logos is part of
logo, and the battle of who or what is the creator,
but it may also be seen as the alpha and omega between the
leech lines. The indifference to pleasure or pain
that is tagged to the stoic (see root stā-)
is inappropriately labeled, as becoming numb to oppression
is only a fragment of the psychology hidden within, and the
creation of passive individuals who have no feelings and the
relation to Zeno's specific labeling of emotions should be a
clue rather than a way of life, and that there may be a way
to control emotions in a way unknown while also being able
to experience joy, even drear, passionately.
~logue-
suffix, speech, discourse: timelogue, French,
from Greek -logos, from legein, to speak
~logy-
suffix, discourse, expression: phraseology;
Science: theory, study: Biology, Middle English -logie,
from Old French, from Latin -logia, from Greek (from
logos, word, speech), and from -logos, one who
deals with (legein, to speak)
~loyal- (implanted
use) possible root sources: Luoyang-
city in east central China, east-northeast of Xi'an;
Saint Ignatius of Loyala, Spanish founder of Jesuits,
(see counter reformation) Warning:
casuistry implanted use for
confusion, French, from Old French leial, loial, from
Latin lēgālis, legal,
from lēx, lēg-, law The
sense of this word has many long connections, but many
problems, as being faithful has nothing to do with
being casual, in the sense that it is a form of
insurance, as this is based on the work itself, whatever
that may be, that manifests in part faith, on the contrary,
if you are into chance, you may spend an entire life not
working, and living in a dream world. This loyalty is to the
beasts. The true meaning of loyal is sensed with the tagged
roots which is law, but this is not faith, and the confusion
between words and time seem endless.
~neglect2-
a mental state whereby certain aspects of one's life are
either avoided, forgotten, or unheeded that may affect the
pathos and also spread to others, or may even be promoted,
Latin neglegere, neglēct-
: neg-, not (see root ne-) + Latin- legere,
to gather, choose, pluck, read
This word does seem strictly associated
with reading, unfortunately, what is posted and printed is
mostly propaganda, as this seems the way a society is
broken, by numbing you down, and may in fact create the
paralogism that is beyond reason, where reason has now
been removed as a function in society.
~paralogism-
implant, the pairing of envy
and fear as a type of game whereby a classification is
created for it so that it may be used as a tool, or
blocking mechanism to the
detection of this state
~prelect-
to lecture or discourse in public?, Latin praelegere,
praelect-, prae-,
pre- + legere, to read
~privilege2-
( same as privilege1 )
a special advantage, immunity,
permission, right, benefit granted to or enjoyed by an
individual, class, or caste: money;
a principle of granting and maintaining a special right;
law, exercised to the exclusion or detriment of others;
deregulation, exemption; (the right to
privacy, see private, root
per-1-
planck's constant (30)); Middle English, from Old
French, from Latin prīvilēgium,
a law affecting one person : prīvus, single, alone +
lēx, lēg-, law, [ref:
caste- root kes-; incest, castle,
carat; (empty, void); educt*] It does no good to reward people with money if this only
makes other have less, in other words, the system failed, as
the world has only become poorer in general, and in peculiar
ways, a few criminals have made the rest of us slaves to
privilege, a word that has little use as privacy has now
become a science, and it may be that privacy rights are
something that should not be considered privilege at all,
but inalienable, and immunity masking as law should be
separated. The use of privilege may only give you the privet
of L.
vulgare or L. ovalilolium where the leaves are
always opposite, and the origin is unknown.
~prolegomenon-
a preliminary discussion, especially a formal essay
introducing a work of considerable length and complexity;
prolegomena (used with a singular or plural verb);
prefatory remarks or observations, Greek from neuter of
present participle prolegein, to say beforehand :
pro-, before, see PRO-2 (anterior, earlier) + legein,
to speak: "If there is hope. . . .it lies in the
proles" (George Orwell - AHD), the proletarian
Reference essay:
Definitions: Proletariat by Gaither Stewart
Ok, this is the biggest prolegomenon you have seen in a
while. As it stands, it must reach a point at which a line
is drawn albeit minor, that is to say, the tightening of the
manner is implied so that the work can be the most useful
across a range of readers, especially journalists, who at
the present time, hold a key position in the ability for
society to advance, and also wake up to their passiveness in
the atrocities that abound. This applies an open mind and a
willingness to see past the veil, so that others may share
in the rights to life. To subject, our education system
should be revised radically, and should be provided at no
cost if that is as vital as much as the stretching of the
prolate into a prelate, of which it overrides. Prologue has
been revised to get you thinking about how we approach
education, and knowledge itself.
~prologue-
(evision) the study and
practice of speech; proem; education in speech and
writing technique; poetry; a section at the beginning
of a piece of work such as a book; biblio, Middle
English prolog, from Old French prologue, from
Latin prologus, from Greek prologos : pro-,
before; see PRO-2 (anterior, earlier) + logos, speech
~relegate-
the obscure assignment, position, or condition; to banish;
commit; exile, Middle English relegaten, to banish,
from Latin relēgāre, relēgāt-
: re-, re- + lēgāre, to send, depute
~sacrilege-
thief of something sacred: privacy; desecration of the
spirit: alienation; Middle English, from Old French, from
Latin sacrilegium, from sacrilegus, one who
steals sacred things : sacer, sacred; see SACRED +
legere, to gather, [ref:
sacrifice-
relinquishment of value; Middle English, from Old French,
from Latin sacrificium : sacer, sacred +
facere, to make, see
dhē-
three fates (12)]
~select2- (evision) a choice of
that which is separated; (Mathematics: 0 separated
from 1 leaves 1); a preference that becomes singled out:
logogram; representation of the people through (open and
fair) frequencies without partisanship by those who are most
qualified through a form of counsel of unions; reason,
Latin sēligere, sēlēct-, sē-,
apart; (see root s(w)e-) + legere, to
choose
reference*: root s(w)e-;
solo, ethic, custom, secret, hurdle*
To subject again, how much value can
you place on someone selected if the reasoning and
connections are masked by deformities in a deformed world?
It seems the whole process is a failure. Value is masking
reason in millions of choices being made already where value
has become abstract and kills, and to apply that to a
republic is not Democracy.
~sortilege1-
a process by which paths are chosen that alter a course in
one's life that all lead to the same end; (example: earth séance);
a form of a sacrifice one makes in order to navigate the future; sort;
a conviction to avoid life in favor of death;
sortie, Middle
English, from Old French, from Medieval Latin sortilegium,
from sortilegus, diviner : Latin sors,
sort-, lot; see ser-2-) + Latin legere, to read
reference: root
ser-2-; sermon, sorcerer, consort,
desert3, inapt**
~syllogism-
analogies in weight that may or may not always properly
combine value with reason before deduction; (example1:
determination of major and minor in both reason and value:
"Human life exists inside a universe", the major
premise, "Our presence is detected in this space",
the minor premise, therefore, "I am",
conclusion ) (example2:
no determination of reason weighed against value:
"Our country needs change", the major premise,
"I can lead you down that path", the minor
premise, therefore, "Vote for me", conclusion)
(example3: no
determination of value or reason: "We need to
fight terrorists", the major premise, "We need
to build this up with troops", the minor premise,
therefore, "This so-called person thinks logically",
conclusion), Middle English silogisme, from Old
French, from Latin syllogismus, from Greek
sullogismos, from sullogizesthai, to infer :
sun-, syn- + logizesthai, to count, reckon (from
logos, reason)
The wizards and warlocks rest with the weird and ruthless
sorties of our language itself, and their behavior related
to its normal function. The dictionary did tag sortilege as
witchcraft, but upon a closer review, it seems this is being
reflected in the expression of the electoral arena.
go to next chapter |
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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