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  Sapphire Herbs/plants: Blue-eyed grass, Blue-eyed Mary
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"Violence does, in truth, recoil upon the violent." (Arthur Conan Doyle - AHD)
 
Root Groups: Iphigenia, Fag end, Jayhawk, Hermetic

Chapter 55: Images, Bones, and Mist in the Garden

January 23, 2009: While on the prow of data, the sapphire was chosen this chapter based on some of the feelings in the trail provided by the dictionary and passages from The Bible. We enter into the age of Aquarius at some point in time if not already. Many comparisons can be made in evaluating the mapping, and specifically the cardinal locations, which the astrological sign of Cancer heads the water of life section, or that of joy, and the clause. In this chapter, a feeling of the earth, wind, and fire seating arrangement will soon become evasive, if not confusing, especially when the bascule starts off the pack.

According to the referenced "Sun & Moon Signs" [1], the Babylonian name for Aquarius, gu. la. has been translated as meaning both a goddess of childbirth and healing, while also referencing "constellation of the great man", which is likely a reference for fear and knowledge. This may be where the story of Enkidu was emulated in reference, as in the ancient epic of Gilgamesh as a man who grew up in the desert among the wild beasts, who became his friends. He is often seen watering an ox, which just happens to also align with the current Chinese calendar, and the year of the ox, 2009.

Ganymede is also associated with this journey, as a boy of beauty, sitting likely above the water of life and in association with the illusive Zeus, who is often Deus, or touched on in this chapter, Thoth, who also holds the ankh in the left hand in a XIX Dynasty relief depicted in the AHD, page 1867. Thoth seems to sit across from Thor, or Thursday, who is also a male figure. In mythology, Thoth is the god of the moon, and analogical to the prude, or "wise woman", and from the word history, this section was considered "advantageous". Around the nature of Thoth, we also have the prussian blue, or iron blue, the insoluble dark blue pigment, ranging out of the north-central European history before the 13th century. She may seem blue, as the kermes berry, which is actually a vivid red.

Iphigenia begins the reader, and has turned out to be a serious strange-love group. She was rescued by Artemis, and seems to stem out of the water, where the cardinal sign is associated with the albatross, a pelican, from Portuguese, or Spanish alcatraz, from Arabic al-gattās : al, the + gattās, white-tailed sea eagle. This seems directly associated with The Rime of the Ancient Mariner by Samuel Taylor Coleridge, which the mariner killed and had to wear around his neck as a penance.
[1] Sun & Moon Signs - An indispensable illustrated guide to astrological characteristics" by Julia and Derek Parker

Part one: Iphigenia

camp26-bascule-chiaroscuro2-culet-culotte-cunnilingus1-cutaneous-cuticle-cutin-cutis
-cyte-cyto-
hide1-hoard-hose-huddle-hut-kishke-lederhosen-meerschaum2-obscure
-recoil-scum-shieling-skewbald-skim-sky-et-
(s)keu- to cover, conceal, Zero-grade form *(s)ku-, Variant *(s)keić-, zero-grade form *(s)kuć-, contracted to *(s)kū-, [ Suffixed basic form, Old Norse- sky, sky, cloud, Old Norse- sky, skewbald, cloud, sourced akin to Scandinavian, both sourced *skeu-jam, cloud, ("cloud cover") ]; Zero-grade form *(s)kū-, suffixed form *skū-mo-, [ Old French- escume, skim, scum, Old High German- scūm, meerschaum, scum, Middle Dutch- schūm, scum, all sourced Germanic *skūmaz, foam, scum, (< "that which covers the water") ]; suffixed form *skū-ro-, OBSCURE, CHIAROSCURO, Latin- obscūrus, "covered," dark (ob-, away from; see epi-); Zero-grade form *kŭ-, suffixed form *kū-ti-, Old English- hyd, hide1.5, skin, hide, Germanic- *hūdiz, suffixed form *ku-ti-, CUTANEOUS, CUTICLE, CUTIS, CUTIN, Latin- cutis skin; possibly suffixed form *kū-lo-, CULET, CULOTIE, BASCULE, RECOIL, Latin- cūlus, the rump, backside; suffixed form *ku-to-, -CYTE, CYTO-, Greek- kutos, a hollow vessel; Extended zero-grade form *kus-, Old English- hosa, hose, hose, covering for the leg, Old High German- hosa, lederhosen, leg covering, both sourced Germanic *husōn; suffixed form *kus-dho- (or suffixed extended form *kudh-to-), Old English- hord, hoard, stock, store, treasure (< "thing hidden away"), from Germanic *huzdam; Russian- kishka, kishke, gut (< "sheath"); Suffixed extended zero-grade form *kut-no-, Latin- cunnus, cunnilingus, vulva (< "sheath"); Extended root *keudh-, Old English hydan, hide1, to hide, cover up, from Germanic suffixed lengthened zero-grade form *hūd-jan; French- hutte, hut, hut, from Germanic suffixed zero-grade form *hūd-jōn; Low German- hudeln, huddle, to crowd together, probably from Germanic *hŭd-, SHIELING, from a Scandinavian source akin to Old Norse skāli, hut, from Germanic suffixed o-grade form *skaw-ala- [Pokorny 2 (s)keu- 951] Iphigenia* (chiaroscuro1 - kelć-2- doggo (25)) (cunnilingus2 - leigh-) (hide2 - kei-1- dissentient (49)) (meerschaum1 - mori-  gargoyle (22))
~bascule- a device or structure, such as a drawbridge, counterbalanced so that when one end is lowered the other is raised, French seesaw : bas, low (from Medieval Latin bassus) + cul, bottom (from Latin cūlus, rump, [ref: stealing water, see clepsydra, root wed-1- snowmen (26)]

This brings up the root ghei- cotangent*, which includes hibernate, and the Chimera, from Greek khimaira, the she-goat, and one may wonder if this is analogical to the images of Mary, which are only anomalies overlaying massive programming of familiarity related to dogmatic spiritual knowledge. The root in question tells it that it is related to winter based on the hibernation theory. The word winter belongs to another root, the same as clepsydra and Hydra, the multiple headed monster.

~chiaroscuro2- the technique of portraying light and shade in pictorial representation, light and dark elements combined to form a pictorial work, also called claire-obscure, Italian : chiaro, bright, light (from clārus, clear, see kelć-2- doggo (25))+ oscura, dark, from Latin obscūrus, see root (s)keu-

~culet- the small flat face at the bottom of a gem cut as a brilliant; armor consisting of overlapping plates used to protect the buttocks, obsolete French, diminutive of cul, rump, from Latin cūlus

~culotte- a woman's full trousers cut to resemble a skirt, often used in plural, French breeches, diminutive of cul, rump, from Latin cūlus, [refs: culm1: stem, Latin culmus, stalk; culm2: IMPLANTED-coal dust, supposedly from Old English col, coal]

~cunnilingus1- oral stimulation of the clitoris or vulva, New Latin, from Latin, he who licks the vulva : cunnus, vulva, (see (s)keu-) + lingere, to lick, see leigh-; electuary, lichen, Federal Reserve*

Reference:
-cuneiform-
wedge-shaped inscriptions from the ancient Sumerian, Akkadian, Assyrian, Babylonian, and Persian writings (filled shadows), also one of three bones in the tarsus of the foot, from Latin cuneus, wedge

~cutaneous- of, related to, or affecting the skin, from New Latin cutāneus, back-formation from Late Latin intercutāneus, and subcutāneus, both from Latin cutis, skin

~cuticle- the outermost layer of the skin of vertebrates; (epidermis, see root der-); a strip of hardened skin at the base and sides of a fingernail or toenail; dead or cornified epidermis; Zoology: the noncellular, hardened or membranous protective covering of many vertebrates, such as the transparent membrane that covers annelids; Botany: the layer of cutin covering the epidermis of the aerial part of plants, Latin cutīcula, diminutive of cutis, skin

~cutin- Botany: a waxlike, water repellant material present in the walls of some cells and forming the cuticle, which covers the epidermis, Latin cutis, skin + -IN

~cutis- Anatomy: see (dermis; connective tissue below epidermis) [ note: The epidermis root der- includes tear1, tart1, turd, and teeter, poking to blotch*

~cyte- suffix, cell; New Latin -cyta, from Greek kutos, hollow vessel

~cyto- prefix, cell, from Greek kutos, hollow vessel

Obviously, cells are not hollow vessels, but to genetic bigotry, this serves as a sign of opportunity and propaganda at the same time, and possibly to cover names like sol, which is the fluid or solution of the cell that is the constituent of cell plasma. It is also strange that Cytherea, another name for Aphrodite rests between the hollow vessels. A possible analogy would be the use of sexual arousal as the primer for the bascule as an application for propaganda from the use of wedging concepts.

~hide1- to put or keep out of sight; secrete (secrete1- back-formation of secretion- generation and separation of substances in cells, secrete2- hiding place, cache, synonymous with hide1); prevent disclosure or recognition of; conceal: tried to hide the facts; to cut off from sight; cover up: clouds hid the facts; Middle English, hiden, from Old English hydan, Synonyms: screen, bury, cloak; hide1.5, skin of an animal, especially the thick, tough skin or pelt of a large animal; beat severely; flog; vestige

It makes no sense to classify three opposing definitions of a word as vestige, beating, and skin, unless you intend to abuse or confuse the essence of knowing the true intentions of use, and play a game with fear, as the root of hideous is Old French hide, hisde, fear. To remove the hide of an animal would indeed leave the animal in a hideous looking state. This has obviously been played on as terrorism and torture.

~hoard- hidden fund or supply store, (see diamonds) for future use; a cache; to gather or accumulate a hoard keeping private or hidden, Middle English hord, from, Old English, see polka partner hoarfrost

~hose- label for stockings; socks; used only in the plural; close-fitting breeches or leggings reaching up to the hips and fastened to a doublet, formerly worn by men, used only in plural; flexible tube for conveying or trapping liquid for passage or measurements; water level; to water, drench, or wash with a hose fastened to a faucet; Middle English, a stocking, from Old English hosa, leg covering

The hosanna is to pray to a Godhead deity, or man god, while Hosea, is the 28th book of the Old Testament which tells of the immediate whoredom situation of departing from the Lord, and the story is seemingly based on this disorder and also seems to be propagating it.

~huddle- implanted use, densely packed crowd or group; small private conference; causing to crowd; drawing oneself into a crouch; to arrange, do, or make hastily or carelessly, from huddle, to crowd together, possibly from Low German hudeln; Low German- hudeln, huddle, to crowd together, probably from Germanic *hŭd-

The root ud- is that of hubris, or wanton violence, see root ud- mars (46) The root includes "about" which may be analogical to the two empty vessels or the chiasma, X marks the spot.

~hut- label for dwelling in any condition; shack; temporary structure; tent; to take shelter from the weather; French hutte, of Germanic origin

~kishke- see derma2 (cooked naked blood flesh and/or intestinal parts with matzo meal, flour, etc.) Yiddish, from Russian kishke, intestine of a dead body

~lederhosen- leather shorts, often with suspenders, worn by men and boys, especially in Bavaria, German, from Middle High German lederhose : leather (from Old High German ledar) + hose, trousers (from Old High German, hosa)

Greek Mythology: Leda, which supposedly changes into a swan is from the root swen-; sound1, unison, consonant, and resound. The routes to page 1046, and long measure*. Leda is a mother by Zeus, but also of Helen, and Pollux below, and married to the strange Tyndareus who just happens to be from Castor and Clytemnestra. This love in a mist is also the tenth satellite of the planet Jupiter.

~meerschaum2- a fine, compact, usually white claylike mineral of hydrous magnesium silicate H4Mg2Si3O10, found in the Mediterranean culture for fashioning tobacco pipes as a building stone, also called sepiolite (cuttlefish), tobacco pipe with a bowl of this material, German mer, from Old High German mari, see mori-  gargoyle (22) + Schaum, foam (from Middle High German schūm, from Old High German scūm see root (s)keu-

In the construction of the sepiolite, there is the sepia, predominantly a color of dark grayish yellow brown added to the suffix -lite meaning stone. Although the meerschaum stone is white, the smoke that rises out of the pipe may be analogical to the dark ejected from the ten-legged cuttlefish. The fish does this as a defensive mechanism that fools the attacker. It may be assumed that the attachments to the foam scum is merely something to block the view.

~obscure- a perceived deficiency applied to light; dark; non-delineated; not distinguishable with any known image; Linguistics: having the reduced, neutral sound represented by schwa (ć) (note: the sound of the schwa may be slightly incorrect based on the fact that the symbol is an overlay for lack of replacement in editing, see sound keys); not considered in a hive or nested community: the war criminals obscured the facts of human dignity; out of sight, not normally seen; ambiguous: the human's were obscuring the basic fact that all life was in the same boat; vowel reduction; block; hide: "Unlike the origins of most nations, America's origins are not obscured in the midst of time." (National Review - AHD); Middle English, from Old French obscur, from Latin obscūrus

Reference:
-oblong- deviating from order, beginning of ellipse; root root del-1-; linger, length, lent, black flag*
-obloquy- disgrace, abusive contradictions, root tolkw- male fern*
-ambiguous- Latin- ambiguus, uncertain, from ambigere, to go about, : ambi-, around + agere, to drive, ag-  secret agent (11)

To delineate, is to take away from a line to determine a known shape with only the obscured duplicity effect where any shape may automatically match the cloaked spiritual desire. It may that the observer is becoming obsequious (sekw-1-; sequester, insignia, follower) rather than acquiesced into the mood. See root kweić-; quiet, coy, requiescat; exarch2*

~recoil- to spring back to life; flint or flinch; to fall back; return: "Violence does, in truth, recoil upon the violent." (Arthur Conan Doyle - AHD); reaction often assumed off the physical surface and interpreted emotionally instigating fear, Middle English recoilen, from Old French reculer : re-, re- + cul, buttocks (from Latin cūlus); Synonyms: flinch, quail, shrink; Flinch implies a faint-hearted retreat: "We did not flinch but gave our lives to save Greece." (Simonides - AHD); Quail implies loss of courage based on intimidation; Recoil implies withdrawal: "With a sudden revulsion his heart recoiled from its purpose." (Henry Wadsworth Longfellow - AHD)

~scum- a filmy or foamy layer of extraneous matter that either forms or is collected on the surface of water; (derogatory); refuse matter; dross; slight appearance of disapproval; Middle English, from Middle Dutch schūm

~shieling- Chiefly British: a shepherd's hut; mountain pasture used in the summer; from Scots shiel, hut, from Middle English shele, possibly from Old English *scēla, probably of Scandinavian origin

This weird camp seems made up from the two strange skull roots, of which one was collected last chapter skel-2- infomercial (54), and the other skel-1- ineffaceable*, holds the shield. It is also the second school, analogical to flow, although, the machine sees this differently.

~skewbald- (derogatory); having spots or patches of white on a coat of a color that is not black: a skewbald palomino; calico horse; Middle English skeued, of mixed colors (probably from skreu, sky, cloud, of Scandinavian origin

It was in Kozhikode Calicut, India, that was designated the site of Vasco da Gama's first landfall in 1498, which the word calico is created from. There is also a calico bush known as mountain laurel, which is a poisonous northeastern American evergreen shrub, with leathery leaves, and white or pink flowers. The palomino is rooted to the ineffaceable root pel-1- guidon*. It is Tantalus who is the father of Atreus and Pelops, which means "dark + ōps, face, eye.

~skim- to remove (skirt off) floating matter from the base liquid: skimmed off the top; to take away the choicest or most readily formulated contents or parts: skim milk; to throw an object with force in order to ricochet: skimming stones on the pond; a superficially enhanced movement; glide; brush: the fire was brushed and skimmed from the torque; scrutiny; Middle English skimmen, perhaps from Old French escumer, to remove scum, from escume, scum, of Germanic origin

~sky- a reference for the upper atmosphere above the surface of Earth; Usage problem: referenced as skies in plural as though air is divided vertically; an appearance of the expanse of air reflected into view off the ionosphere: gray skies between the eyes of the clouds; celestial bearing; above the line of vision (without horizontal ground bearing); Middle English, from Old Norse sky, cloud

Greek Mythology: Beside the affair of Castor and Clytemnestra, she had another daughter with Agamemnon named Iphigenia, that Agamemnon was ready to discard as a sacrifice, but Artermis rescued her, and she later became a priestess. Uranus is also known as the ruling planet of Aquarius, and the earliest supreme god, a personification of the sky, who was the son and consort of Gaia and the father of the Cyclones and Titans. Uranus is the seventh planet from the sun, with an approximate 84 year cycle, from Late Latin Üranus, from Greek ouranos, heaven, Uranus

Part two: Fag end

criss-crossing

1-sleep-et-slēb- to be weak, sleep, possibly related to slēg- through a hypothetical base *slē- (< *sleć-), Old English- slćp, sleep, Germanic- *slēpan, *slēpaz [In Pokorny 1. leb- 655] fag end*
~sleep- a natural, periodically attuned state of rest for the mind and body, where the eyes usually close and consciousness is partially altered while bodily functions are decreased, response to stimuli reduced, and brain-wave activity reduced with fluctuations; functions related to hibernation and dormancy; Botany: a classification of that of leaflets or petals that fold up or together during absence of sunlight; to reestablish or nourish: slept a bit to refresh; idioms- a place of residence; sleep in; assumed sex; a time of consideration; Middle English slepe, from Old English slćp

it seems a connection to the ebb root, which is upo- (MC2*) may lead to understanding some of the secrets of regeneration related to sleeping in the lex, as this contains the Upanishad, which ties to the sed- root (hutzpah*), which is the sleep center as posited and envy's fire control center. Sleeping can be quite enjoyable, and beneficial, where rheum is developed, which is the root, sreu- Kyrie*. One could easily say that sleep is asking for mercy in every way, but be careful who you ask for that mercy, as the happy cloud is the lord, and dreams, although still mostly misunderstood, may be habitually derived, based on envy and fear battling it out. It also seems the eu lex, or that of the good well, is nested in key root groups. The fag end may be the drudge report, or the frayed end of the cloud, where the love in a mist becomes so thick, it is hard to determine who is propaganda, and who is not. In dress, the loose ends are always propaganda to the sewing machines where curiosity has been sewed up. In etymology, the faggot is the lump, or old woman, from fagot. Although a bit derogatory, she is what burns off the end, and analogical to the smoke signal rising out of the march.

keuć- El Dorado2 (34) KYRIE, Greek kurios (vocative kurie), master, lord

The slēg- relation is yet to be discerned, as it seems misleading comparing sleep to indolence, careless, lustful, and to be languid in order to gain sympathy. The Pokorny for slēg- is page 959, and this may be the ivory tower or the ivy league*.

Part three: Jayhawk

prudent

3-livid-slivovitz-sloe-et-slī- bluish, contracted from *slić-, O-grade form *sloi-, Old English- slāh, slā, sloe (< "bluish fruit") from Germanic *slaihwōn; Suffixed form *slī-wo-, Latin- līvēre, livid, to be bluish; Suffixed form *slī-wā, Serbo-Croatian- šljiva, slivovitz, plum [Pokorny (s)lī- 965] jayhawk*
~livid- implanted use, black and blue discoloration as in a bruise; ashen; pallid; angry; furious, Middle English livide, from Old French, from Latin līvidus, from līvēre, to be bluish

Angry is red, hot, the sun, not blue, so is the liver. So it may be assumed that envy's fire scares you into the blue, but this is senseless. The party seems to begin with livelihood, which is the root leit-, a key marker. Then, a little leubh- twister (42) with the mirror program livelong, then a quick jump to leip- and some leudh- syndromes (40), and not only are you not informed, you have been signed to the living will, and according to the trail, much under the control of the master Medusa, the red serpent.

~slivovitz- implanted use, liquor- dry colorless plum brandy, Serbo-Croatian šljivovica, from šljiva, plum

The body is the water of life in this place, so to drench the spirit by telling yourself that you need spirits, is how the beasts lie to you, and you believe them. Once alcohol has entered the body, all of the propaganda associated with the root slēg- begins to apply, and drunks are often close to being asleep, and of course are already heading straight for this function.

~sloe- see blackthorn, either of two eastern North American plum trees or shrubs, Prunus alleghaniensis, having dark purple fruit, or P. Americana, having yellow or red fruit; the tart, plumlike fruit of either of these plants, Middle English slow, from Old English slā

Reference:
-blackthorn- a thorny, deciduous Eurasian shrub ( Prunus spinosa ), having white flowers and small, bluish-black, plumlike fruit used for mixing alcoholic concoctions such as slow gin

There seems a relation to that of the skin as being purple or blue, while the contents are the juicy red. This is backwards, as the human skin comes in shades of gold and brown, and pale, colors of that spectrum that is starboard on the vehicle. And, of course, the contents may be bluish, where possibly the lover and liver meet, where the difference between red and blue becomes the deep purple. The word plum is from Old English plūme, a tree with a hard-shelled stone fruit, and associated with plumage, that of the outer coat of a bird.

The page Pokorny for the jayhawk group is 965, and the possibly the three jaybirds, Garrulus, Cyanocitta, and Aphelocoma, which are crested birds with loud harsh calls, which is likely why the jayhawk, a fictitious name was picked up for the phrase soil-free, and this was from union battles fought in the 1800's in Kansas and Missouri.

Part four: Hermetic

thoth

6-freeze-frost-pruinose-prurient-prurigo-pruritus-et-preus- to freeze, burn, Old English- frēosan, freeze, to freeze, Germanic- *freusan, to freeze; Suffixed zero-grade form *prus-to-, Old English- forst, frost, frost, Germanic- *frustaz, frost; Suffixed form *preus-i-, PRURIENT, PRURIGO, PRURITUS, Latin denominative- prūrīre, to burn, itch, yearn for, from *preusis, *preuris, act of burning; Suffixed zero-grade form *prus-wīnā, Latin- pruīna, pruinose, hoarfrost [Pokorny preus- 846] hermetic*
~freeze- classification for temperature flux where liquid becomes solid as measured; see mercury; loss of heat; surfaces that come in contact with the open atmosphere at low temperatures; ice formation; to be harmed or die from exposure to low temperatures: froze to death; uncomfortable or unsurvivable conditions; becoming affixed or motionless: frozen to the pole; shock doctrine; see livid; icily silent or coy; (see kweić- exarch2*); pathological habitual inflexibility: opinion frozen into dogma; congealed or coagulated, (see gel-; gelatin, cock-of-the-rock*); to make very cold; chill; lack of compromise; restriction or shrinkage; an overbearing sanction; freeze-frame photography; pause; to anesthetize by chilling; spell of cold weather; frost; stop-motion propagation: the bombs overwhelmingly froze the sounder emotions; unfriendly instigation and treatment; see pathocracy; Middle English fresen, from Old English frēosan

~frost- a deposit or collection of minute ice crystals formed when water vapor condenses below a freezing temperature in the open atmosphere; application to glass or other surfaces to emulate this effect as textured with decorative pattern making: frosted the cake; a shock on the surface often perceived or felt as anger and/or frustration; Middle English, from Old English, also see frore- archaic: extremely cold

~pruinose- Botany: having a white, powdery covering or bloom, Latin pruīnōsus. frost, from pruīna, hoarfrost

The word prune is polka partner to pruinose and prurient, and has two distinct meanings; one of fruit that is dried and eaten, and the other is what is removed from plant stems often dead after a frost. This brings up the root ret- which prune is a member along with barouche, round, and the roulette wheel. The Pokorny page is 866, and may emulate a homonym leading to homorphism*.

~prurient- excessive desire for sex that is considered not put in particular order; lascivious (see las-, wanton lustful; factitive*); arousal which may be inordinately exposed: prurient web; Latin prūriēns, prūrient-, present participle of prūrīre, to yearn for, itch

Humans are normally horny and seek various disorders (love as hate or hate as love; offset bonding), so the labeling of prurient was improper when access to sex is wide open on any Internet connection that is not monitored or restricted financially. Because sex sells, the disease of fake art only spreads, and this is likely intended.

~prurigo- classification for a skin disease considered chronic of various causes, marked by the eruption of pale, dome-shaped papules that itch severely, Latin prūrigō, an itching, from prūrīre, to itch

~pruritus- severe itching, often of undamaged skin, Latin prūrītus, from past participle of prūrīre, to itch


 

Sapphire- cardinal- clear, hard variety of corundum used for gemstone that is usually blue, but may be any color but red; Color: blue color of gem sapphire, Middle English saphir, from Old French safir, from Latin sapphīrus, from Greek sappheriros, from Hebrew sappir, a precious stone  near to Leo and Gemini, also see star sapphire- polished convex stone exhibiting asterism (cluster of stars, three asterisks in triangular form, six-rayed crystal structure, see root ster-3- left-brain*)

R. Mark Sink 2009JAN23

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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