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Part one: Handler Expor
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2-fart-partridge-et-perd-
to fart, Old English *feortan,
to fart, from Germanic *fertan, *fartōn,
partridge, from Greek perdix, partridge (which
makes a sharp whirring sound suddenly flushed), handler* |
~fart- to expel intestinal (?") through the anus;
break wind?; annoying or foolish person; [classification
of comparison: relaxation as
time fritter, fast and long- further (feather),
expressed audible*] note: fool
around- Metis]
~partridge-
any of the various Old World pheasants, ruffed grouse, and
bobwhite, that of (Perdix and Alectoris) used as
bait or gaming classification,
all similar and related to the partridge; plumb bob*; Middle
English partrich, from Old French perdriz,
alteration of perdis, from Latin perdix, from
Greek perdix; also see [root peræ-;
part, pare, prepare; hammerlock2*, trigger*]
sound keys: patronage, patroness, patronize;
patronal, see root peter-; padre, pater,
hawse*; also kap-; have, captive, behoof;
diplexer* |
comments.. not at this moment, evidence cleared
Party two: Halo Hannah alias Lalya
45*-comport-deport-export-emporium-diapir-fare-fere-fermium*-fern-ferry-fieldfare-firth-fjord-ford
-führer-gaberdine2-import-importune-opportune-pan2-peroneal-porch-pore-poromeric-port
-portable-portage-portal-portamento-portative-portcullis-porter-portfolio-portico-portière-portulaca
-purport-rapport-report-(sport)-support-transport-wayfayer-wayfaring-welfare-et-per-2- to lead, pass over,
a verbal root belonging to the group of per-1; Full-grade
form *per-, Suffixed form *per-tu-, Old Norse
fjötdhr, firth, fjord,
an inlet, estuary,
Germanic- *ferthuz, place for
crossing over, ford, Suffixed form *per-onā, Greek-
peronē, peroneal, pin on a brooch,
buckle (< "that which pierces through"), Suffixed form
*per-yo-, Greek- peirein,
piapir, to
pierce; O-grade form *por-, [ FARE, WAYFARER
LEAVES
WAYFARING, (WELFARE), Old English- faren, to go on a
journey, get along; Old English- faran,
fieldfare,
possibly alteration by folk etymology in Old English, from
an uncertain original; Old High German- faran, gaberdine,
to go, travel, sourced Germanic *faran, to go ],
Suffixed form *por-o-,
passage-journey?,
emporium; pore2,
poromeric, Greek- poros,
journey-passage,
Suffixed (causative) form *por-eyo-, to cause to go,
lead-conduct, Old English ferian, ferry, to
transport, Germanic- *farjan, to ferry; Lengthened-grade
form *pōr-, Old English- (ge)fēra,
fere, "fellow
traveler," companion (ge-, together, with, see
kom), Germanic- suffixed form *fōr-ja;
Old
High German- fuoren, führer, to lead, from
Germanic suffixed (causative) form *fōr-jan; Possibly
suffixed form *pro-no-, feather, wing, (< "that which
carries a bird in flight"), Old English fearn,
fern
(having feathery fronds),
Germanic- *farnō, feather,
leaf, Sanskrit parnam, pan, leaf, feather;
Zero-grade form *pr-, Suffixed form *pr-tu-, passage,
Old English- ford, ford, shallow place where one may cross a
river, Germanic- *furdu-; [PORT1,
OPPORTUNE, Latin portus, importune, harbor (< "passage"), Suffixed form
*pr-tā-], PORCH PORT3, PORTAL, PORTCULLIS,
PORTER2, PORTICO, PORTIÈRE,
PORTULACA, Latin- porta,
gate; Suffixed (denominative) form *pr-to,
PORT5, PORTABLE,
PORTAGE;
[PORTAMENTO]; PORTATIVE,
PORTER1, COMPORT,
DEPORT, EXPORT, IMPORT, (IMPORTANT?),
PORTFOLIO, PURPORT,
RAPPORT, REPORT, (SPORT), SUPPORT, TRANSPORT, Latin-
portāre, to carry, halliard*",
Halo*"
2e, H1 (4e) or H2*
(gaberdine1
- wel-2-; Helenē,
microgametocyte**)
(pan1 -
pete-; compass, patina2, sugar maple**) |
~comport-
non-bearing in manner; conformity; deportment; attachment as
detachment; easily agreeable; creating an (I, or IT), Middle
English comporten, from Old French
comporter, to
conduct, from Latin comportāre,
to bring together : com-, com- + portāre, to
carry; comportment- deportment?
Comment: This is a difficult
word and most likely because it is an
implant for machine purposes, and works in the area
between what we perceived of the world around us, and
ourselves in the process of interacting with others.
They is a good place to view this anomaly at the present
time if you look closely at the current electoral hierarchy
of machine propaganda and into the darker areas. Once these
(I's) are created, they begin to mingle with others and
spread becoming aware of each other's false support mask by
the beasts in their minds. For this definition, the original
contents was omitted. This implant was also located in the
kill position next to compose or composure which has a
different sound about how one might behave than another
comport. And, you can see them coming.
~deport-
to force appellation as cause
to be removed from a country (house or residence); banish;
behavior in opposition;
one in-self away*; comport,
French déporter, to banish, from Latin dēportāre,
to carry away : dē-, de-
+ portāre, to carry; sense 2, Middle
English, from Old French deporter, to
behave, from Latin dēportāre;
deportation, deportable, depose, deposit, [ref: see
root apo-; aft, off, composite, preposition;
alphabet**]
~diapir-
an anticlinal fold in which a mobile core, such as salt or
gypsum, has pierced through the more brittle overlaying
rock, French, from Greek diapeirein, to push :
dia-, dia- + peirein, to pierce
Letter of references for emergency
P root
canal: (items listed)
1. (what you may need) diaper: folded
piece, absorbent, diamond shaped figures, to weave,
Old French diaspre, Medieval Latin diasprum,
from Medieval Latin diaspros, pure white +
asper, rough
2. (appellate decision) diaphysis:
Anatomy: shaft of lone bone, root bheuæ-;
bumkin, blues brothers, short one*
3. ( plaintiff and judge) tibia: larger
of two bones in the lower human leg; fourth division;
between femur and tarsi where ancient flutes are made,
see shinbone, pipe, walking tall
4. MAIN COURSE:
~peri-
prefix, around; about; enclosing: perimysium;
near: perinatal, Greek, from peri, see chance,
cascade, root kad-; diamond head*] |
~export-
to send or transport [commodity: commodious- roomy,
suitable, toilet; commode- woman's
ornate headdress, fashioned around 1700 (17,
upstairs)], send abroad; sale trade; merchandising;
exportation, Middle English ex-sport, from Latin
exportāre : ex-, ex- + portāre, to carry
see [root med- commodious, mete1,
mete2, metheglin,
Medusa, empty; foliate**, bearing**; reference Metis;
add info] [official notice:
see root mei-1-; common, communism, commune,
commute, molt, (to change one's place of living inside their
house); forceps**, forcefeed**,
surrender**, formletter**]
~emporium-
a (place) where various goods are bought and sold;
marketplace; retail
store or place where goods are traded (exchanged);
Latin, from Greek emporion, from emporos,
traveler, merchant : en-,
in; see en-2 + poros, journey,
sound keys: empress, bee, bee's nest, biz
nest, queen, emprise; root
ghend-; prowess
~fare-
to get along: How are you faring with your project?
(Fine, thank you, fare-thee-well); to travel, go, to dine;
eat; transportation charges and fees; food, drink; diet:
simple home-cooked fare, Middle English faren,
from Old English faran
~fere-
Archaic: a companion; spouse; Middle English, from
Old English gefēra
~fermium*-
Atomic Element #100, Symbol Fm, synthetic
transuranic metallic element have 10 isotopes with mass
numbers ranging from 248 to 257 and corresponding half-lives
ranging from 0.6 minute to approximately 100 days, (after
Enrico Fermi) [ref: fermion- a particle, such
as an electron, a proton, or a neutron, having half integral
spin and obeying statistical rules requiring that not more
than one in a set of identical particles may occupy a
particular quantum space.]
~fern-
any of numerous flowerless, seedless, vascular plants having
roots, stems, and fronds and reproducing
spores, Middle English
fearn
intermission
|
~ferry-
Nautical: to transport (people, vehicles, goods) by boat
across a body of water; to cross (a body of water) by a
ferry; to deliver a (craft either under its own power or by
piggy-back); Nautical: ferryboat; a place where passengers or
goods are transported, across a body of water, such as a
river; franchisel, Middle English, ferien, from Old
English ferian; sound keys:
fertile; soil, soul, sold, saved?
Comment: Fertile soul may be
perceived in a mosaic way, if you spilt the word up a bit
remembering the art in F.
~fieldfare-
An Old World thrush (Turdus pilaris) having
gray and reddish-brown plumage, Middle English (feldfare;
note: see feldspar, Feldspath), from Old English
feldeware, error for *feldefare
: felde, field + -fare,
to go: How do you like the mirror in the field of
fare view? elder-error
Comment: The word veldt
means: open grazing (gazing) area. This is often confused
with oneself.
~firth-
Scots. a long narrow inlet of the sea, Middle English,
furth, from Old Norse fjördhr,
[ref: see polka partner fisc-
treasury of her own kingdom designated by her friend
fiscal, a yearling that jumps for her each year
according to her twisted plan. She spends the rest of the
time farting on your head. see documents for details as she is the
firth one in the line up.]
~fjord-
a long, narrow, deep inlet of the sea between steep slopes,
Norwegian, from Old Norse fjördhr
Comment: The lie goes like this. If you're flabby, you're a
flack, or a press agent, and serve as gast, or to scare.
Both flack and flabbergast are implants of
unknown origin,
and may serve as guides. There is no association for this
word to this description, rather to ford. It is uncertain
why these words were created, other than to say, if the
beast created them, as said before, stupid is, stupid does.
~ford- a shallow place in a body of water (you), such as a
river, where one can cross by walking or riding on a animal
housing, (normally a shallow area where water has receded as
seen through the beast's eyes); Middle English, from Old
English, no more data, dune approaching
~führer-
envy and fear as one, death to
the body, they hate bodies; tyrant,
German, from Old High German vüerer,
from vüeren, to lead, to lie,
from Old High German fuoren
Comment: This relates to the
way life is viewed, whether fear and envy rule, or joy and
drear kneed love without looking down at it. See V, good
moo V.
~gaberdine2- a long, course
cloak or frock worn that was or
is known to be worn by Jews during the Middle Ages, also
called gaberdine; Chiefly British: a
loose smock worn by laborers
(sense of fare); Obsolete
French gauvardine, from Old French galvardine,
perhaps from Middle High German wallevart, pilgrimage :
wallen, to roam; (see wel-2) +
vart,
journey
(from Middle High German, from Old High German, from
faran, to go to heaven, [root wel-2;
willow, walk, volume, evolve; metoo**] [note:
check root en- for correlation,
add info from hello]
Comment: We have some
implantation related to vart, which has nothing to do
with the word journey, just look it up. Journey is
now, you're reading it, it is called a diary and
vart sounds like fart to
me. There is also the word gabardine which is a quick
replacement for loose smock or twill around your neck. Also,
the root wel-2 is referring to the
(inside of a celestial body), not outer space as she wishes. Her reign
is wel-1 where she wishes her wells.
It's voluntary.
~import- to bring
sale, or carry in from an outside source peculiar to (goods
and materials) shipped from a foreign source; Computer
Science: to transfer data from an outside source such as
a file; carrying or containing meaning combined with
information; implied; mean;
Archaic: importance for something and significant to
that something; count; that which is considered either
important or has meaning, Middle English importen, to
convey a meaning, from Medieval Latin importāre
and from Old French importer, to cause, both from
Latin importāre, to carry in, cause : in-,
in-, (see IN-2) + portāre,
to carry
Comment: All life is imported,
every second of thought, so when someone tells you that (to
import) is what meaning represents, they have become the
machine. What is imported varies infinitely on millions of
levels of perception and what actually is imported
and used would only be designed by recording more data, and
that would only be available to the one who recorded it.
~importune-
to beset with insistent or repeated requests, entreat
pressingly; annoy the vex; plead irksomely; beg;
Importunate; French importuner, from Old French
importun, inopportune, from Latin
importūnus : in-,
in-, (see IN-1) + portus; refuge
Comment: Wake up folks,
in1 is according to facts, designates a meaning of
NOT,
before, or un-, and in2 represents within, into, and so on,
so it seems the tune imported is one of a negative filler of
sorts using the meaning of (this is not opportune) as
opportune. Actually, this word has a nice sound to it, so
the beasts had to grab it up and use it, or else the secret
would get out that Music is not exactly what we thought it
was or is. Also, the case between (in1, in2, and im-) is
showing a monte.
~opportune-
implant, suggestions:
suited; peculiar purpose; a fitting; ob portum (veniēns)
accusations of portus; added suggestions from the
beasts; seasonable; timely; well-timed, opossum vegetable juicer*
Comment: Closest derivative to
opportune is oppose; root epi-;
oblast (wal-), obverse, press tightly, conceal with face;
ob- to turn toward her (envy), thus creating the
face of death. Implant list:
opportunist, opportunistic, opportunistic infection,
and opportunity. Synonym
breaker: break: "The best you can get is an
even break." ( Franklin P. Adams - AHD) Now, how do you feel
about taking a break? Confused? That was the plan, just
don't break wind. More? see bhreg-: fracture,
bed of roses**, moving the visible to the inside as defense*
and, see atrophy
~pan2-
leaf wrapping of betel vine over betel vine nut; chewy
preparation of spices, nuts, and lime from the Fary Easter;
Hindu pān, from Sanskrit
parnam, feather, betel leaf [ref:
pan1-
see root pete-; note:
a whole section will be devoted to the unusual pan, as he
carries a device that was stolen, and it is referenced in
Scorpio. There is also a relation of sounds: betelgeuse,
Portuguese and much work on
patina. Pan 1 will be with its root with this information. [
accomplice notice: Pan2, image 1, page 1306: charge:
larceny, contribution in culturing the beast: revolving
colony with false system: verdict, death]
~peroneal-
of or relating to the fibula or to the outer portion of the
leg, Greek peronē, pin of
a brooch, [notes:
broach-
cast; patina surfacing; moot; raising rot
negatively from inside versus outside as normal, but when
observed it may seem pretty (mason's chisel); installed by
the mouth or peroral as food sold without organically
derived fiber thus bleaching the body of its soul. We have
two primary ways to function, one is food, the other air.
Information can only make you so crazy, the beasts need more
weaponry against you in this department by masking it over
the face of Eve, as she rings the daily bell.]
~porch-
covered platform usually with an extended roof-line;
attachment of this concept with the option of being open or
closed; verandah; Obsolete: portico; covered walk, Middle
English porche, from Old French, from Latin
porticus, portico, from porta, gate, [ref: polka
partner porcine- swine of a pig, reference: brooch and
(hump-back) Hunnish fibula device (safety pin); [official
notice: your buckle is undone; gallery is now
open barrier]
~pore-
pore1: no derivative, read or study carefully; meditate deeply or by
open gaze as a cat searching for a meal; stare, Middle English
pouren, pore2: a small opening in
the skin or tissue of an animal serving as evaporation
and/or absorption; transpiration; porous material such as
some rocks, soil, sediment, or fluids that contain space
where something can pass back and forth easily, Middle
English, from Old French, from Late Latin porus,
passage, from Greek poros, geese passing through*,
not Thor* [note: (pored over)
is an error, as this space is
not painted on the outside of a rock or a piece of paper,
and this also reference last chapters pouring analogy
related to pouring out the well.]
Warning: the word poor
and pore are being manipulated in use
thanks to companies like Campbell soup, Coca-cola, and many
others who dress the cylinder.
This area needs serious work, in excess of 15 minutes. See
pau-; no one is poor, they are made that way
by the dressing forced upon them that is accepted.
needs expanding, sound keys:
can, cants, catkin, kitten, kittam, also fola, folic,
follow, willow, billow, also cethara, Cetus, ceteris
paribus, and cete versus ◊
gallery
~poromeric-
flexible substitution; leathery like
skin as non-passage or flexibility of passage, Greek
poros, passage + meric, (POLY), passage of
many [telegram: poori not flat, getting fuller vacs.]
intermission 2 |
~port-
port1: a place on a waterway with
facilities for loading and unloading ships; metropolis
location; waterfront district; harbor as port; port of
entry; Computer Science: entrance or exit module for
data that is networked; peripheral device for connection,
Middle English, from Old English, from Latin portus;
port2: Nautical:
no derivative, left-hand side of
a ship, also called larboard; to turn a (craft) or make a
shift to the port side: port the helm; ported sharply to
avoid a shoal (probably from port side);
port3:
no derivative,
Nautical: a porthole; Archaic: cover for porthole; an
opening, as in a cylinder or valve face, for the passage of
steam or something more fluid; a gapping hole in an armored
vehicle; fortified structure capable of sound view or firing
her weapons; Scots. gateway; Middle English,
gate, porthole, from Old French porte, gate,
from Latin porta;
port4:
a rich sweet fortified wine; [AFTER OPORTO];
port5:
to carry (a weapon) diagonally across the body, with the
muzzle or blade near the left shoulder (marking her); the
position of a rifle or other weapons (mental) when ported
(spoken); manner in which this is perceived; bearing; French
porter, to carry, from Old French, from Latin
portāre
Comment: This layout is preliminary, yet there
are many correlations that lead to this result. Take for
example the word opine which is a way to hold a state
of opinion hard in place, and this seemingly is done with
conceptual words such as oporto where you
constantly fight with yourself and it's opinion and doing so
from both sides if this can be perceived. Also, it seems
that when we face something, our port is left, unless you
face yourself, then it is reversed, and matches more to the
calypsos sections in referencing facing away, so port is
right facing away if it is facing you.
~portable-
carried or moved with ease; Obsolete: bearable,
durable not endurable as it is
carried away*; something, such as a lighter than air
craft (between the rim; gravity of love)*, Middle English,
from Old French, from Late Latin portābilis,
from Latin portāre, to carry, [
note: capable of receiving wear on the inside
(decay) versus having a real skin accepted by others]
~portage-
Nautical: carrying of boats over land;
act of implanting metropolis swooping
around obstacle, illegal use of earth; track or trail
for navigation, moving water as land*; such transport:
canoed and portaged the goods; portaged around the rapids,
Middle English, from Old French, from porter, to carry, from
(alteration?) Latin portāre,
[notice to envy: guilty verdict]
-portal-
doorway, an entrance, or a gate, which has a peculiarity to
its face-imposing entrance: the library faced the
knowledge, the metropolis imposed the library; portal
vein; of, or related to a point of intersection at
entrance; an entrance similar to the transverse fissure of
the liver in which blood vessels enter; Middle English, from
Old French, from Medieval Latin portāle,
city gate, from neuter of portālas, of a
gate, from Latin porta, gate, [also plaintiff
objects to porta hepatis as there is no way to know
if it is hepatitis A or hepatitis B, and both these viruses
are likely guilty creations]
~portamento-
Music: smooth, uninterrupted glide in passing from
one tone to another by use of the hand, voice, or mechanism
for (in-ferry, inference), by facing the bow (not shooting
one like your water man in the mirror); pleasant,
Italian, from portare, to carry, from Latin [ref:
sound keys: pheasant,
pleasant, pleasure; balance in the midst of each
jump*]
~portative-
capable of or used in carrying,
Middle English portatif, from Old French, from Latin
portāre,
to carry, example: lute, autoharp, [note:
the guitar is not used as something that carries you to many
locations, it is the music that is carrying with the signal
from the bow: we must care] [note: violation of
passage, see root listing order]
~portcullis-
grating method (iron properties) woden slates, or other
suspensions in direct view of your psyche; Middle
English port-colice, from Old French porte coleice,
sliding gate : porte, gate (from Latin porta +
coleice, feminine
of coleis,
sliding (from Vulgar Latin *cōlātīcius,
from cōlātus, past participle of cōlāre,
to filter, strain, from cōlum, sieve, not
shock-pause; something used to weed those with eyes wide
shut*; measurements that contain forbearing
lineage and seen as drear
overlaying fear in groove, as this is
accomplished by eating from the starboard before port has
been set, or larboard, labored; otherwise; Law:
Larceny of knowledge without labor of love through emotions
represented by conscience bound to curiosity of the sea in
respect, and leaving it be until the love flows (pause for
pleasant so she can pass, if no sign, avoid) [special
note: drear is connected to Friday,
Frigg and rear]
~porter-
porter1: person employed to carry burden assumed from
traveling; baggage assumed outside versus inside by masking
potato man as possum overlaying boredom*, attendance of
passengers on sleeping cars; parlor car; janitor who cleans
inside of institution for those who freely welcome, Middle
English portour, from Anglo-Norman, from Late Latin
portātor,
from Latin port portāre
[note: are you getting as sick of the word portare as I am?
Just know that tear is not wear, it is something that
falls.] porter2: Mostly
British: one in charge of a gate or door, Middle
English, from Anglo-Norman, from Late Latin portārius,
from Latin porta, gate; porter3:
dark stout beer (hotel california), flushing the gate to
get down; may be used for navigation if barrier is
sighted within the rim; expendable*
| Scenario: Outside maintenance that carries
burdens being removed as a way to remove one's inside which
is only feeding the beasts, and removing the ability
for the observer to anaylize inside burdens without
employment inside. sustained. |
~portfolio- a portable case (cassette player?) for
holding material, such as loose papers, photographs, or
drawings; materials collected in such as case portraying a
person: as work; caseation, movable black-box; necrotic
degeneration; [note: see campbell]
~portico-
the perception of the porch as the walkway (slider, sunset
grill*); columns on both sides while also allow outside
access in view of entrance
to cave or supported building, Italian, from Latin
porticus, from porta, gate, [ref: mercy seat
removal, burning the gate*]
~portière-
a heavy curtain hung across a (doorway): emphasis
door; French, feminine of portier, porter, from
Old French, from Late Latin portārius, from Latin,
gate,
Comment: (wayfarer)
one who crosses border toward emotions but also voided
generation behind as this area will acquire a set in the
future, in other words, joy and the spirit must bond at some
points, and this cannot be accomplished by crossing the
bridge, but must be an open and free bridge that allows an
open view of the complete sunset. Many of the images we see
in this place create patinas overlaying the seemingly simple
concepts of 3R, but here it seems we are burning a bridge by
turning this power to the side].
~portulaca-
any of the various (fleshy plants or planet fleshy?)
of the genus Portulaca, especially P.
grandiflora of Southern America (near Cancer-Capricornish)
cultivated for its showiness, colorful and flowery, that
open in Sunlight, also called moss rose, whoops, that's rose
moss, sorry. Middle English, from Latin portulāca,
purslane (flip this
over), from
portula, diminutive of porta, gate (from the
gatelike covering of the seed capsule) see point
of sale
|
 |
[alert>
vampire:
rose moss,
time-seed capsule installed, it's a groovy jungle. 10-5
>>PORTER1, COMPORT,
DEPORT, EXPORT, IMPORT, (IMPORTANT?),
PORTFOLIO,
PURPORT,,,,]
notes: inlet, estuary,
retracted legs, not yogi
or bearer |
|
Section notes:
~purport- kneed; he doesn't need; she always needs;
rhythm in port; false appearance: cat- stare, dog- feel but
haven't learned kneed; sub-stance; intention; purpose; set forth,
Anglo-Norman purporter : pur-, forth (from
Latin prō-; see PRO-1) +
porter, to carry (from Latin portāre (air please)
~rapport- comes in the form of
Music or news; Old
French, raporter, to bring back : re-, re- +
aporter, to bring (from Latin apportāre
: ad-, ad- +
portāre, to carry, see
mirror)
~report- short for elroy rapport; sorry but report has been
excluded from this letter
~sport- trops, tropical snake;
no status available as this word may be suspect to
self-sex disport
~support-
bearing weigher (wearyer, worryer, wearwolferer);
support from below not above;
that which is actually holding up the sky; driving a fiat
radically; endurable again; mason main program family;
Middle English- supporten, from Old French supporter,
from Latin supportāre
again, sub-system of to carry again, Clan of supporters:
uphold, back?, advocater, another
champion of self
~transport- kinky out not in; disease;
en-rapture, implant ecstasy without upload
~welfare-
health, save; happiness; prosper and live long; fine tuned
base of care; (not a welfare hotel); regular revised as
regulation; privatizing regular agents, Middle English, from
wel faren, to fare well (faretheewell:
not, to fare well: adiosy),
from Old English wel faran : wel, well, see
ilet or inlet (wone or
wtwo: yhwh:
code entry 2008JULY24 + faren, to get along)
note: why? wether
~wayfarer-
one (wei) who does actually travel; (into the
Savannah we go) Middle English weifarere :
wei,
way; see WAY PLUS faren,
to go ON [sound: alectic:electic] a journey, that's
not fury...that's one of the Furies who doesn't leeward,
prefer white myself and loathe ele-actions.
~wayfaring-
charges: see gallery, see wayfaring tree
(Wayne), turning from red to black and wayside,
to fail to continue, give up; reply: it's over
Lalya, you had no
waylay, but I still love you. (objects may appear larger
in the rear view mirror); one who travels actually;
Old English waifaringe (blow-fart),
journeying, from Old English wegfarende :
wegh, way; see WAY
MINUS farende,
present (past) participle of
faran, to go on a journey
Lions: Greek-
peronē, peroneal, pin on a brooch,
buckle (< "that which pierces through"), ouch
[shooting the hen, I mean heam, sorry, careless yolk,
see glair]
More Lien: Old English- faran,
fieldfare,
possibly alteration by folk etymology in Old English, from
an uncertain original; not uncertain, it's not
over
Additional Lien:
Old
High German- fuoren, führer, to lead,
Endless Lien:
Old English- ford,
ford, shallow place where one may cross a
river, Germanic- *furdu-; [PORT1,
converted to comport composter
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R. Mark Sink date needed
witnesses: Thomas J. L. Dove
(22) Jesus saw infants being suckled. He said to his disciples,
"These infants being suckled are like those who enter the
kingdom." They said to him, "Shall we then, as children, enter
the kingdom?"
Jesus said to them, "When you make the two one, and when
you make the inside like the outside and the outside like the
inside, and the above like the below, and when you
make the male and the female one and the same,
so that the male not be male nor the female female; and when
you fashion eyes in the place of an eye, and a hand
in place of a hand, and a foot in place of a foot, and a
likeness in place of a likeness; then will you enter the
kingdom."
more notes:
conpare:compare switch; con- through content opposing
fieldfare spinner, see alien hand
trade, trading
enceinte, fermata
Germanic- *farnō, feather,
leaf, Sanskrit parnam, pan, leaf, feather
check reverse osmoses
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