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© ebookopen.com
"A 'miracle'
is the manifestation in this world of the laws of another."
(G. I. Gurdjieff)
Follow the sacred stone journey through
the
sun and the Fourth House of Cancer
and prepare to meet the Lion.
This journey will end
in
Aquarius,
and the
perverse and rebellious Uranus,
and
then,
you'll be ready to go again,
"Amen", the
beast says. |
In search of - The Sapient Stone Language
Chapter Twenty Eight:
The Wandering Prefect Fires in the Winnows Current
hub,
index
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Keywords: adding a
mirror, looking glass, Day of Hermes, god of commerce, wag
the tail, flaring muzzle, winnowing
device, pictorial device, wooden cow, call to arms, on the
lookout, Christ child, energy and frequency, ulterior
barrier, high tones in the sky
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"In his needle shop a tortoyrs hung,/An Allegator stuft."
(First Folio, 1623, Romeo and Juliet)
"the
eyes of others our prisons; their thoughts our cages"
(Virginia Woolf - AHD) |
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The blow of inner dependence is upon us, and I agree, it doesn't
muster. In fact, it seems more like a desert of wandering fires
whose flames are loose and twisted in fear's throw. For those
who follow writers such as P. D. Ouspensky, you may be reminded
of a concept called "The Law of Three" in this chapter. For a
true miracle to manifest, the third force most certainly exists,
and to prevent access, a mirror may confide.
Part one: Jess
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8-admire-comity-marvel-miracle-mirage-mirror-smile-smirk-et-smei-
to laugh, smile, Old English- smercian, smirk, to smile
(with -k formative), from Germanic reshaped forms *smer-,
*smar-, Middle English- smilen, to smile,
Scandinavian source probably akin to Swedish smila, to
smile, from Germanic extended form *smīl-, Suffixed form
*smei-ro-,
Latin- mīrus, wonderful, Prefixed zero-grade form *ko(m)-smi-,
smiling with (*ko-, *kom-, together; see kom), Latin cōmis (< cosmis),
comity, courteous, jess**, allure* |
◊~admire- to regard with pleasure,
wonder, and
approval; to have an high opinion of; esteem or respect;
Chiefly New England/Upper Southern U.S. To enjoy
(something?), Archaic: to marvel or wonder at; "I just
admire to get letters, but I don't admire to answer them."
(Dialect Notes), French, admirer, from Old French, from
Latin admīrārī, to wonder at : ad-, ad= +
mīrārī, to wonder
Comment: I had previously
wrote about this word and now see this state a little more
clearly than before, and the subtle relationship between
adding a mirror in our perception along with the
wonderment affect which can easily be convoluted for envy and
fear. By adding the mirror, a division is necessary, as there is
a mathematical element of importance. The way this may be
inferred is knowing that words like adorn also can subtly
perform a metathesis into (a door), where what is
decorated is seen in a different way, that is to say, instead of
envy being fired up, a more creative element is ignited. This
helps to show why words like wonder belong in this
group and the importance of curiosity over desire.
~comity- atmosphere of assembling as in ancient Roman times
(comitia) to legislate harmony; the jurisdiction where one court
may accede another's decision; Latin cōmitās, from
cōmis, friendly
Comment: Again, the
metathesis with words is tricky, as with comedy, if
broken down, you have co-median, but with comity,
you get committee and the
focus is an attempt to continue the cooperation as a short cut.
Words like come, are actually Middle English co-men; See the
roots wed-2-, gwā-,
and ed-
~marvel-
evoking wonder or surprise; astonishment; amazement;
bewilderment; Middle English marvail, from Old French
merveille, from Vulgar Latin *mīribilia, alteration
of Latin mīrābilia, wonderful things, from neuter plural
of mīrābilis, wonderful, from mīrārīī, to wonder,
from mīrus, wonderful
~miracle- event, or manifestation of what
appears inexplicable by the laws of nature in the perceived
existing world; supernatural; exciting awe; wonder; a
miracle play or imagination; Middle English, from Old French,
from Latin mīrāculum, to wonder at, from mīrus,
wonderful
Quote: From
"In Search of the Miraculous" by P. D. Ouspensky: "A 'miracle'
is the manifestation in this world of the laws of another."
(G. I. Gurdjieff - ISOTM)
~mirage-
an optical phenomenon that creates the illusion of water, often
with inverted reflections of distant objects, and results from
distortion of light by alternate layers of hot and cool air;
also called fata morgana; something illusionary;
French, from mirer, to look at, from Latin mīrārīī,
to wonder at [ref: fata morgana-
Italian- mirage, Morgan le Fay (from the belief that the
mirage was caused by her witchcraft) : fata, fairy (from
Vulgar Latin fāta, goddess of fate; see FAIRY) +
Morgana, Morgan (probably from Irish Morrigain.
~mirror- a
surface capable of reflecting sufficient undiffused light to
form a virtual image of an object placed in front or beside it;
also called looking glass, something that through
faith reflects or gives a true picture of something else; worthy
of imitation; Middle English mireor, from mirer,
to look at, from Latin mīrārīī, to wonder at, from
mīrus, wonderful
~smile- a
facial expression characterized by an upward curving of
the corners of the mouth and indicating happiness, pleasure,
amusement, or derision; favorable
disposition or aspect; affection, Middle English
smilen, to smile, probably from Scandinavian origin,
Synonyms: grin, simper, smirk
Comment: The word affection
(to influence) is a characteristic of all facial
expression, as the manner in which a face looks at you
determines effectual progress in communication.
~smirk- to smile in an affected,
often offensively self-satisfied manner; an affected, often
offensively self-satisfied smile, Middle English smirken,
from Old English smercian, to smile
Comment: The diction decided to use
the word affected twice in the definition of smirk to
show the affect of the smile is from within. This is also
associated with the allusion of mimicry, see (s)mer-1-
MEM (23) |
Well, if you wondered, the word wonder has no root derivative.
Although, the closest words in lex are included in the next
group, which is part of the carry over from last chapter on the
days of the week and now we'll include five of the planets. As
it stands, I need to keep these pages at about 110 KB for
efficiency at my end, so be sure and read the comments and
notes.
Quote: "In nature everything is connected and
everything is alive. The diagram of this classification is
called the 'Diagram of Everything Living'. According to this
diagram, every kind of creature, every degree of being, is
defined by what serves as food for this kind of creature or
being of a given level and for what they themselves serve as
food, because in the cosmic order each class of creature feeds
on a definite class of lower creature and is food for a definite
class of higher creatures." (G. ISOTM, p322)
Part two: Maya
revised 2008OCT15
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10-atmosphere-fan-odin-van-vatic-wedeln-wednesday-wodan-wood
-wotan-et-wet-1-
to blow, inspire, spiritually arouse, related to wē-,
Lengthened-grade form *wōt-, [WODEN, Old English Wōden,
Woden, Old English- Wednesday, Wōdnesdæg, "Woden's day",
Old Norse- Õdhinn, Odin, Old High German Wuotan, Wotan,
all sourced Germanic suffixed form *wōd-eno-, *wōd-ono,
"raging," "mad," "inspired," hence "spirit," name of the chief
Teutonic god *Wōd-enaz, Old English wōd,
wood,
mad, insane, Germanic *wōdaz, Lengthened variant form *wāt-,
Latin vātēs, prophet, poet, Variant form *wāt-,
Old High German wedil, wedeln, fan, Germanic
suffixed form *wath-ili, Suffixed variant form *wat-no-,
Latin vannus, van, fan, a winnowing fan, Oldest basic
form *æwet-, becoming *awet- in suffixed form *awet-mo-,
Greek- atmos, atmosphere, (< *aetmos), breath, vapor,
maya*, [image from top:
Jupiter, Mars,
Venus, Mercury, and
Saturn] |
~atmosphere- gaseous mass that envelopes
a celestial body such as earth held in place by a gravitation
field; air or climate in a specific place; Physics: unit of
pressure equal to the air pressure at sea level, approximately
equal to 1.01325 X 105 newtons per square meter;
dominant intellectual or emotional tone or attitude, especially
one related to a specific environment or state of affairs,
dominant tone or mood of a work of art; aesthetic quality or
effect, especially a distinction and pleasing one, associated
with a particular place, New Latin atmosphaera : Greek
atmos, vapor + sphaera, sphere; see sphere
~fan- a
device for creating a current of air or a breeze, especially: a
machine with rigid vanes on a shaft that spins, or a
collapsible, usually wedged shaped device made of thin material;
a machine for winnowing; the shape of a fan such as the peacock;
to move or cause a current of (air) with or as if with a fan;
direct a breeze upon for cooling; stir something up; open
something out; continuous firing; to winnow; strike outward,
Middle English, winnowing fan, from Old English fann,
from Latin vannus
Comment: The word fanatic
has a shorter version called fan which is rooted with the
dhēs- group which is the fire side according
to poky-nave.
~Odin-
Mythology: Norse god of wisdom, war, art, culture, and the
dead and the supreme deity and creator of the cosmos and human
beings, Old Norse, Ōdhinn, [ref:
Hermes- Greek Mythology: god of commerce,
invention, cunning, theft, who also
served as messenger, scribe, herald for other gods]There seems to be an
immediately association with Odin and the freaky-looking
Hermes, who is a direct prefect to Zeus. Also, from [link]
DAY OF HERMES: The fourth day of the month was
sacred to Hermes, for that was his day of birth. In a similar
vein the fourth day of the week (Wednesday) was named after him
(in Greek it was called Hermes' day, in Latin Mercurius' day,
and in Germanic Woden's day - the Norse god Woden-Odin
being identified with Hermes-Mercurius). The seven
days of the week correspond to the seven heavenly bodies (the
five visible planets, the sun and the moon); but the ordering
was based on mythic tradition. addition: "On the fourth
day of the month queenly Maia bare him [Hermes]." -
Homeric Hymn 4 to Hermes 20
~van- van3:
one wing; Archaic: a winnowing device, Middle
English, from Old English fann, and Old French van, both from
Latin vannus; van2: no derivative, the vanguard, the
forefront; van1: no derivative,
road box-type vehicle; from caravan
~vatic- of
or characteristic of a prophet, oracular, from Latin vātēs,
seer
~wedeln- a
style of (falling off a snowy mountain) in which the skier
executes a series of short, quick, parallel turns by moving the
backs of the skis from side to side at a constant speed; German,
from wedeln, to wag the tail, fan, from Middle
High German wadeln, wedeln, from wadel,
wedel, fan, tuft of hair, from Old High German
wadal, wedil
Comment: Another correlation is
to the winnowing that removes chafe in the mind is the Latin
tufa, helmet crest, that represents some adornments
worn by women.
~Wednesday-
fourth day of the week, Middle English Wōdnesdæg, Woden's
day, Word History: We say the names of the days of the
week constantly, but for most of us they are nonsense syllables.
The seven day system we use is based on the ancient astrological
notion that the seven celestial bodies (the sun, the moon,
Mars,
Mercury, Jupiter,
Venus, and Saturn) revolving around
stationary earth influence what happens on it and that each
of these celestial bodies controls the first hour of the day
named after it. This system was brought into Hellenistic Egypt
from Mesopotamia, where astrology has been practiced for
millenniums and where seven had always been a propitious number.
In A.D. 321 the Emperor Constantine the Great grafted
this astrological system onto the Roman calendar, made the first
day of this new week a day of rest and worship for all, and
imposed the following sequence and names to the days of the
week: Diēs Sōlas, "Sun's Day"; Diēs Lūnae,
"Moon's Day"; Diēs Martis, "Mar's Day";
Diēs Mercuriī, "Mercury's Day; Diēs Jovis,
"Jove's Day" or "Jupiter's Day"; Diēs Veneris,
"Venus's Day" and Diēs Saturnī, "Saturn's Day".
This new Roman system was adopted with modifications throughout
most of western Europe: in the Germanic languages, such as Old
English, the names of four of the Roman gods were converted into
those of the corresponding Germanic gods. Therefore in Old
English we have the following names (with the modern English
developments): Sunnandæg, Sunday; Mōnandæg,
Monday; Tīwesdæg, Tuesday (the god Tiu, like Mars,
was a god of war); Wōdnesdæg, Wednesday (the god Woden,
like Mercury, was quick and eloquent); Thunresdæg,
Thursday (the god Thunor in Old English or Thor in
Old Norse, like Jupiter, was lord of the sky; Old Norse
Thōrsdagr influenced the English form); Frīgedæg,
Friday (the goddess Frigg, like Venus, was the goddess of love);
and Sæternesdæg, Saturday.
~Woden- Mythology: Anglo-Saxon god identified with Odin, Middle English,
from Old English Wōden [ref:
[link]
"Daidalos . . He built a woden cow on
wheels for Pasiphae"; and [link]
"Poseidon was angry that the bull was not sacrificed, and turned
it wild. He also devised that Pasiphae should develop a lust for
it. In her passion for the bull she took on as her accomplice an
architect named Daidalos . . . He built a woden cow on wheels,
took it, hollowed it out in the inside, skinned a real cow, and
sewed the contraption into the skin, and then, after placing
Pasiphae inside, set it in a meadow where the bull normally
grazed. The bull came up and had intercourse with it, as if with
a real cow. Pasiphae gave birth to Asterios, who was called
Minotauros. He had the face of a bull, but was otherwise human.
Minos, following certain oracular instructions, kept him
confined and under guard in the labyrinth. This labyrinth, which
Daidalos built, was a cage with convoluted flextions that
disorders debouchment."
~wood- wood2:
Archaic: mentally unbalanced; insane, Middle
English, from Old English wōd; wood1:
no derivative, xylem of the trees and shrubs consisting
of cellulose and lignin, from Middle English wode, from
Old English wuda
~Wotan-
Mythology: German god identified with Odin, German, from
Middle High German, from Old High German Wuotan |
Hermes is a spy who likens the fourth, works for
Zeus undercover, and thwarts clarity. The Norse god of wisdom, war, art, culture,
and the dead and the supreme deity and creator of the cosmos and
human beings may be displayed above, as in ancient times, Jove
was worshiped in our bizarre geometric Gregore-around, that is
actually based on this old twisted belief. This should bring up
at least one ecesis on sound for words like Jehovah. Also, the
sound of Odin associates the woden cow
who ends up making mini-bullies or possibly bad seed.
I attempted to integrate these old concepts
into the psyche map and it may help in discerning the value in
association to our convoluted zoon of a year full of twisted and
wagging tails. Our wisdom must come from knowledge, and this is
what is the force. War is what is reflected off this when
twisted into envy. Art is how we live. Culture is the result,
but this is morphed by our upper centers of power, and it seems
into flextions that aid in debouchments that may result into
parades of self joy. The twisting continues with another
significant root member of the twisters, that should also bring
much concern about the true nature of our psyches in action.
Part three: Mendel's Law
revised 2008AUGUST11
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9-astonish-blunderbuss-detonate-dunderhead-stun-thor-thunder-thursday
-tornado-et-(s)tenæ-
to thunder, Zero-grade form *stnæ-, [Old English
thunor, thunder, Thursday, Thor, BLUNDERBUSS,
DUNDERHEAD, Middle Dutch doner, donder,
thunder, Old Norse Thōrr, Thor, (oldest form
Thunarr), "thunder" thunder god, all sourced Germanic
*thunarnaz], O-grade form *tonæ-, Latin- tonāre,
to thunder, Mendel's Law**
[photo © NASA] |
~astonish-
fill with sudden wonder or amazement; surprise; Probably
alteration of astonien, from Old French estoner,
from Vulgar Latin *extonāre : ex-, ex- + Latin
tonāre, to thunder, [ref: ex-
prefix, away from, without, outside; also astonied
polka partner means to be dazed, bewildered,
Middle English astonied, past participle of
astonien, to amaze]
~blunderbuss-
a short musket of wide bore and flaring muzzle, formerly
used to scatter shot at close range; (weapon);
person regarded as clumsy and stupid, alteration of Dutch
donderbus : donder, thunder (from Middle English
doner) + bus, gun (from
Middle Dutch busse, tube)
~detonate-
to explode or cause to explode, Latin dētonāre,
dētonāt-, to thunder down : dē-, de- + tonāre
~dunderhead-
a dunce, Perhaps Dutch donder, thunder (from Middle Dutch
doner) [ref: dunce- person
regarded as stupid, after John Dunn Scotus, whose
writings and philosophy were ridiculed in the 16th century]
~stun- to
daze or render senseless, by or as if by a blow;
overwhelm with a loud noise; stupefy, as with the emotional
impact of an experience; astound; daze; a blow that
shocks, Middle English stonen, Old French
estoner, from Vulgar Latin *extonāre [ref:
dazzle- to
inspire admiration; amaze with spectacular display,
frequentive of DAZE]
~Thor-
Mythology: Norse god of thunder, Old Norse Thōrr
~thunder-
the rumbling sound produced from rapidly moving air moving
outward from an electrical discharge; a sound that resembles or
suggests thunder; express loudly or violently; roar; Middle
English, from Old English thunor
~Thursday-
fifth day of the week, Middle English, from Old English
thūres dæg, alteration (influenced by Old Norse thōrsdagr,
Thor's day) of thunres dæg, Thor's day (translation of
Latin Latin Iovis diēs, Jupiter's day) :
thunres, genitive thunor, thunder
~tornado-
the cumulonimbus extension downward in a column of air that
produces a destructive vortex of immense size up to miles wide
and moving column speeds of up to 500 miles per hour (800
kilometers), that manifest and follow the path of the storm; a
violent thunderstorm in western Africa or nearby Atlantic
waters; whirlwind; hurricane, Alteration (perhaps influenced by
Spanish tornar, to turn) of Spanish tronada,
thunderstorm, from tronar, to thunder, from Latin
tonāre |
It seems, Wednesday led straight to Thursday, and Mendel's Law,
also known as the law of segregation where homologous
chromosomes segregate (as pairs) to specific locations, and a
secondary principle believed where they do this independently.
This may be related to the meiosis in our psyches as well.
Part four: Ahem
updated: 2008JULY12
30-adulterate-alarm2-alert-alibi1-alien-aliquot1-allegory1-alleomorph-alleopathy
-alligator-allo-alter-altercate-alternate-altruism-eldritch1-EL
NIÑO-else-hidalgo1
-morphallaxis-other-outré-parallax-parallel-subaltern-trophallaxis-ulterior-ultimate
-ultra-utterance-et-al-1-
beyond, Variant *ol-, "beyond", Suffixed forms *ol-se-,
*ol-so-, VIOLA, Latin ille (feminine illa, neuter
illud), "yonder," that, Old Latin- ollus, suffixed forms
*ol-s, *ol-tero-, Latin- uls, *ulter,
ultrā,
beyond, Suffixed form *al-tero-, "other of two", Latin-
alter, other,
other of two, (ADULTERINE), (ADULTERY), Latin
adulterāre, to commit adultery with, pollute, probably from
the phrase ad alterum "(approaching) another
(unlawfully)" (ad-, to; see ad-), variant
suffixed form *an-tero-, "other (of two)," Old
English- ōther, other, Germanic- *antharaz,
Extended form *alyo-, "other of more than two", Old English- el-, elles,
else,
otherwise, Germanic- *aljaz (with adverbial suffix), Latin- alius,
other of more than two,
Greek allos, other, Adonai**, ahem**
(alarm1 -
ar-) (alibi2 -
kwo-) (aliquot2
-
kwo-) (allegory2
- ger-) (eldritch2
- reg-) (hidalgo2
-
kwo-) (hidalgo3-
dhē(i)-) [image © R. Mark Sink;
Nazca, Peru: Alien hand reproduction] |
~adulterate- the perceived
assumption of impurity according to ingredients; adding
extraneous, improper, or inferior ingredients; spurious, Latin
adulterāre, adulterāt-, to pollute, Synonyms:
debase, doctor, load, sophisticate
Comment: Usage Note: The
word adulterate is the only rooted word in the
neighborhood of lexeme, as the word adult is formed from
Latin adolēscere, to grow up; and to adulate is to
praise back-formed from adulation which is from
Latin adūlārī, to flatter. Also, spurious can be
interpreted as duplicity.
~alarm2- sudden fear caused by
the realization of danger; warning; mechanical timer; a call to
arms; to fill with alarm; frighten; give warning to, Middle
English, from Old French alarme, from Old Italian
allarme, from all'arme, to arms : alla, to the
(from Latin ad illa : ad-, ad- + illa,
plural of illud) + arme, arms (from Latin arma,
see ar-) [ref:
illation- inferring, drawing the conclusion]
~alert- vigilante attentive; watchful;
aware; brisk or lively in action;
a type of signal that warns of attack or danger; mentally
responsive and receptive; quick; (Usage
note: improper noun usage -
condition of preparation; "The
alert was the way the government
remained alarmed to an invisible enemy."); something that
notifies of approaching danger, French alerte, from
Italian all' erta, on the lookout : alla, to the,
on the (from Latin al illam, to that : ad-,
ad- + illam, accusative of illa, that +
erta, lookout, from past participle of ergere, to
raise (from Latin ērigere, see ERECT)
Comment: Converting the word
alert into a noun is not recommended as the inner
feelings of fear are clouded already, and people become
accustomed to the conditioning of propaganda. Being alert would
allow one to become aware enough to warn others not considering
oneself as priority. Being alarmed would do the opposite, and
reroute the focus on oneself, which is part of the propaganda
benefit in converting nouns to (noun attachments), and
moving verbs to fixed nouns as needed to subtly alter emotional
states. If people are always easily alarmed, they are already
programmed for the next phases of propaganda for a real attack
in which they will respond in a particular fashion that is not
what they intended, but is the result of false signals,
emotional manifestations, and disorder in psyche that fits into
a desired field that is acceptable by the beasts.
~alias- an
assumed name; Electronics: a false signal in
telecommunication links from beats between signal frequency and
sampling frequency; also known as: otherwise; Latin, otherwise,
from alius, other
~alibi1-
time
location tracking based on provable whereabouts; a survey of
location in consideration of being guilty of a crime; Usage
problem: An explanation offered to avoid blame or justify
action; an excuse; Usage problem: to fabricated an
excuse, Latin, elsewhere : alius, other + ubi, where?, see root
kwo-; [ref:
root- kwo-, whether, neuter, why;
expected value*; also see root ne, renegade,
generic*] Usage Note: Alibi (noun) in its
nonlegal sense of "an excuse" is acceptable in written usage to
almost half of the Usage Panel - AHD. As an intransitive
verb (they never alibi), it is unacceptable in written
language to a large majority of the Panel - AHD)
Comment: Our society does not even
recognize
psychopathy in legislative or judicial thinking. Thus, the
process by which people are convicted often is invalid, and
actual criminals are free, so we do not have a suitable
executive who is a leader, and have no prospects for one. The
outlaw is the renegades who allow this to happen, not the
innocent victims as imprisoned in a system that promotes itself.
Those who kill, and rape others are also innocent as there is no
education related to the real psychological problems manifested
that are hidden from view on purpose it seems as allowed to aid
in the continued propagated and defective Democracy system. Even
though these sick people cause much harm, they are not evaluated
or found as needed to prevent the overwhelming onslaught of
unbalanced people in an oppressive system designed for them. The
real criminals are free.
~alien-
the attachment of political allegiance whether valid or not*;
foreign; belonging to; a person from an unfamiliar family or
place, often considered unusual because the labeling of alien
is a designation of knowledge about other places that is
missing*; one who is not natural to your location; Ecology:
a plant or animal that occurs in or is naturalized in a region
to which it is not native, (example: Florida armadillo);
creature from outer space; Law: transfer property,
alienate; Middle English, from Old French, from Latin aliēnus,
from alius, other
Comment: The process of turning
people into aliens who are born on planet earth is a disease of
the mind that is distributed by the actual aliens who wear
people suits. They become alien by allowing envy and fear to
rewire their thought patterns into creatures for personal
satisfaction. Proceed with caution.
~aliquot1- Mathematics:
of, relating to, or denoting an exact divisor or factor,
especially of an integer; an aliquot part, Latin aliquot, some
number : alius, some + quot, how many, see
root- kwo-
Comment: The Pokorny for kwo-
is expected value, as we expect (example: 1 is aliquot to
all) or (1 is not aliquot to 0) [ref:
see root tag-; integer, contact, tangent;
loading program*]
~allegory1-
literary, dramatic, or pictorial device in which
characters and events stand for abstract ideas, principles, or
forces, so that the literal sense has or suggest a parallel,
deeper symbolic sense; story, picture show, or play in which
this device is used; (example: John Bunyan's Pilgrim's
Progress and Herman Melville's Moby Dick are
allegories); symbolic representation, Middle English
allegorie, from Latin allēgoria, from Greek, from
allēgorein, to interpret allegorically : allos,
other + agoreuein, to speak publicly (from agora,
marketplace), see [root ger-; segregate,
agoraphobia, cram; commonalty**]
~alleomorph-
an allele; one member of a pair or series of genes that occupy a
specific chromosome, Greek allēlōn, mutually (from
allos, other)
~alleopathy- inhibition of growth in one
species of plants by chemicals produced by another species,
Greek allēlōn reciprocally (from allos, another)
Comment: This could easily be said
about corporations spreading revised genetics upon the planet.
~alligator-
either of two large reptiles, Alligator mississipiesis of
the southeast United States or A. sincnsis of China,
having sharp teeth and powerful jaws, and differ slightly from
the crocodiles in having a broader snout; a noun, adjective,
adverb, or other anomaly that is attached to another noun and
may permanently modify its meaning; attributive; destructive;
Alteration of Spanish el lagarto, the lizard : el,
the (from Latin ille, that + lagarto, lizard,
Word History: In the Travailes of an Englishman,
published in 1568, Job Hortop says that "in this river we killed
a monstrous Lagarto or Crocodile," This killing gives rise to
the first recorded instance of alligator in English,
obviously in a different form from the one familiar to modern
speakers. Alligator, which comes to us from Spanish el
lagarto, "the lizard" was modified in pronunciation and form
in several ways before taking on the form alligator. Such
changes, referred to by linguists as taboo deformation, are not
uncommon in a name for something that is feared and include, for
example, the change in sequence of the r and t
that occurred between el lagarto, and alligator.
An interesting parallel case is crocodile, which appears
in Spanish, for example, as cocodrilo, with a similar
difference in the sequence of the r. The earliest
recorded form of alligator that is similar to ours
appears in Shakespeare's Romeo and Juliet (First Folio,
1623): "In his needle shop a tortoyrs hung,/An Allegator stuft."
~allo-
prefix, other; different; Isomeric, Greek, from
allos, other
~alter- to
change or make different; modify; adjust for better fit;
castrate or spay (an animal), Middle English alteren,
from Old French alterer, from Medieval Latin alterāre,
from Latin alter, other
~altercate- wrangle; dispute; heated
argument; vehement emotion, Latin altercārī, altercāt-,
to quarrel, [ref: alternaria-
fungi in the genus Alternaria, many of which cause plant
diseases, chiefly blights and leaf spots]
~alternate-
to occur in successive turns; pass back and forth from one
state, action, or place to another; to do or execute by turn; to
cause to follow in turns; interchange regularly; happening or
following in turns; succeeding each other continuously;
alternative; serving as duplicate; arranged singling at each
node, as leaves or buds on a stem; arranged regularly between
other parts, as stamens between petals; substitute; Latin
alternāre, alternāt-, from alternus, by turns,
from alter, other
~altruism-
unselfish concern for the welfare of others, French altruisme,
probably from Latin altrui, someone else, from Latin
alter, other
~eldritch1-
strange or unearthly; eerie, perhaps Middle English *elriche
: Old English el-, strange, other + Old English rice,
realm, see [root reg-; royal, regime, rule;
hightoned**]
~EL
NIÑO- Oceanography: a warming of the
ocean surface off the western coast of South America that occurs
every 4 to 12 years when upwelling of cold, nutrient-rich water
does not occur and causes plankton and fish to die and affects
weather patterns over much of the Pacific Ocean, American
Spanish, from Spanish, the Christ child (from the
association between the onset of the warming and Christmastide)
: el, the (from Latin ille + niño,
child (from Old Spanish ninno, from Vulgar Latin *ninnus)
~else-
other; different; additional; more; if not; otherwise;
regardless of extenuating circumstances; alternative, Middle
English, elles, from Old English, Usage Note: Else
is often used redundantly in combination with prepositions such
as but, except, and besides. No one else
but Sam saw the accident (omit else). •When a pronoun is
followed by else, the possessive form is generally written this:
someone else's (not someone's else). Both who
else's and whose else are in use, but not whose
else's: Who else's book could it have been? Whose else
could it have been?
~hidalgo1-
member of the minor nobility in Spain, Spanish alteration of
hijo dalgo, from Old Spanish fijo dalgo : fijo, son + Latin
fīlius, see dhē(i)- + de, of (from Latin
dē- + algo, something, possession (from Latin
aliquō, ablative of aliquid : alius,
some + quid, something, see root
kwo-) [ref:
root dhē(i)-; finocchio, fetal, sainfoin;
broadening*]
~morphallaxis-
regeneration of a body part by means of structural or cellular
reorganization with only limited production of new cells,
observed primarily in invertebrates organisms, such as certain
lobsters, New Latin : MORPH(O) + Greek allaxis, exchange
(from allassein, to exchange, from allos, other)
~other-
being the remaining one or two or more; being the remaining of
one of several; different from that or those implied or
specified; of a different character or quality; a different time
or era; additional; extra; alternate; opposite or contrary;
different person or thing; people aside from oneself, "the
eyes of others our prisons; their thoughts our cages"
(Virginia Woolf - AHD); in another way; otherwise; differently,
Middle English, from Old English ōther
~outré-
highly unconventional; eccentric or bizarre, French, from Old
French, defeated?, past participle of outrer, to
pass someone, from outre, beyond, from Latin ultrā
~parallax-
an apparent change in the direction of an object, caused by a
change in observational position that provides a new line of
sight, French parallaxe, from Greek parallaxis,
from parallassein, to change : para-, among +
allassein, to exchange
~parallel-
equal distance apart everywhere; Mathematics: of,
relating to, or designating two or more coplanar lines or planes
that do not intersect; equal distance partners in reflection;
comparable parts; analogous aspects or readily recognized
similarities; having the same tendency or direction; Grammar:
identical syntactic constructions in corresponding clauses or
phrases; Music: moving consistently by the same
intervals; Electronics: denoting a circuit or part of a
circuit connected in parallel; Computer Science: of, or
relating to simultaneous transmission of all the bits of a byte
over separate wires; of or related to simultaneous performance
of multiple operations; Mathematics: one of a set of
geometric figures, such as lines or planes; exact agreement in
particulars; any of the imaginary lines representing latitude
that encircle the earth parallel to the equator; Electronics:
an arrangement of components in a circuit that splits the
current into two or more paths; provide an equal; match; liken;
showing analogous, Latin parallēlus, Greek parallēlos
: para, beside + allēlōn, of one another, Usage
Note: [...] Applied to object in the world, parallel
can only give a rough approximation to a geometrical idea. A
pair of rails or parked cars cannot be truly parallel in the
mathematician's sense of the term but only more or less so, just
as a road or shelf cannot be truly straight in the geometric
sense but nonetheless may be described as very straight or
relatively straight. The grammarians compunctions make even less
sense when applied to metaphorical uses of parallel.
[...]
~subaltern-
lower in position or rank; Chiefly British: military rank
just below captain; Logic: In the relation of a
particular proposition to a universal with the same subject,
predicate, and quality; subordinate; Chiefly British:
subaltern officer; Logic: subaltern proposition, French
subalterne, from Old French, from Late Latin
subalternus : Latin sub-, sub- + Latin alternus,
alternate
~trophallaxis-
mutual exchange of food between adult and larvae of certain
social insects such as bees or wasps; [TROPH(O)- + Greek
allaxis, exchange (from allassein, to exchange)] [ref:
tropho- nutritive, Greek trophē, from trephein,
to nourish; also see troposphere, earth's outer layer;
and trophoblast; cellular outer layer; and root trep-;
turning, contrive, entropy; manipulation**]
~ulterior-
lying beyond what is evident, revealed, or avowed, especially
being concealed intentionally so as to deceive; outside the area
of immediate interest or concern; occurring later, Latin
farther, comparative of *ulter, on the other side
~ultimate-
being last in a series, process, or progression; fundamental;
elemental; greatest possible size or significance; representing
the greatest possible development or the creation of perceived
sophistication; utmost; extreme; most distant or remote;
eventual, "hoped for ultimate victory"; basic or
fundamental fact, element, or principle; final point or
conclusion, Latin ultimātus, past participle of
ultimāre, to come to an end, from ultimus, last,
superlative of *ulter, on the other side
~ultra-
prefix, beyond; on the other side; beyond normal or
proper degree; excessively; Latin
ultrā-, beyond, [ref: ultra- adjective,
immoderately adhering to a belief, fashion, or course of action;
extreme]
Comment: One should be reminded
that the word immoderate has the root med-,
that is assuming that in order for order to exist, it must be
moderated, but who is doing the moderating? If all that exists
includes extreme, then is not extreme part of the
mix? Then the use of proper would be invalid as we cannot
perceive what is beyond the father but only know at some time
nothing is proper, as time persists, what is suitable only
becomes unsuitable. See root per-1-; prime, proof, veneer;
Planck's constant**, proportionality between the energy and
frequency in a photon; 6.626 X 10-34 joule-second.]
~utterance-
utterance2: uttermost end; extremity;
bitter end;
Middle English, from Old French outrance, from outrer, to go
beyond limits, from Vulgar Latin *ultrāre, from Latin
ultrā,
beyond, utterance1: no derivative,
vocal expression; power of speech or manner; statement, [ref:
utter- absolute; entire, Old
English ūtere, outer, see root ud-; outlaw,
hubris; violence; market*]
--section needs expanding |
The above group is a study in itself, and reveals at least one
secret about the way we accept the intra polis manipulation by
the passive blows we endear as entertainment and sparkles. These
concepts come forward carried down through the centuries into
your soul and operating system, as most of these English
concepts are well embedded into the system.
Below is the a gift in the pathos of this journey, and a valid
warning of the power of those who profess violence is necessary
in any physical form other than from the heart, and in the form
of fire that reaches out to heal.
Part five: Megapolis
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3-vim-violate-violent-et-weiæ-
vital force, Related to wi-ro-, Zero-grade
form *wī- (< *wiæ-), Latin- vīs,
vim, force, with
irregular derivatives violāre, to treat with force,
and violentus, vehement,
megapolis**, Law of 3* |
~vim-
ebullient vitality and energy; vigor, Latin accusative of
vīs, [ref: Viminal-
baths of Diocletian at foot of hill; seven hills in
ancient Rome]
~violate-
to interrupt or disregard; to boycott; harm what is
considered sacred; physically harm
another; defile or disturb;
breach of privacy; cross over the barrier*; Middle
English violaten, from Latin violāre,
violāt-, from vīs, vi-, force
~violent-
marked by, acting with, or resulting from great force;
emotional force; marked by
intensity; extreme physical action;
unexpected injury by force
versus natural; natural phenomena?, Middle English, from Old
French, from Latin violentus, from vīs, vi-,
force |
In thinking about phenomena, we must consider this occurs
outside of ourselves, so to speak, and also, inside ourselves,
as in our psyche. When two people experience this phenomena in
an inter-relation outside of themselves, they would also
experience this phenomena inside their minds on a separate but
parallel existence, as related to their pathos.
The drive in people should be carefully viewed for signs of the
fire and who moderates, and if that moderator is valid in
concept, goal, or direction. This immediately helps to reveal if
someone is a wanderer, who is a sleeper, a spy, or a Hermes of
four parts.
R. Mark Sink 2008JULY5
updates are marked by group
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