| |
"Wind
hammered at us violently in gusts." (Thor Heyerdahl
- AHD)
Chapter
Fifty two: The Empire Strikes Back
December 25, 2008: (introduction written a week
ago) The journey continues, and it has been one of much
unlearning.
The temple of Zeus that we have been blessed with has
enlightened the student to the seasons, especially the
summer and winter solstices, which landed on ground level in
the (original noesis working map) constructed tabernacle. It
is Saturday, that is the 7th day of the week, and Sunday,
which represents the first day of the 5 remaining time
stones all being correlated into the temple already.
In this chapter, we'll see if the ballad between the
butterflies is somehow joining the lower section, and hiding
the two days left on each end of its cycle, while also
directly associating the two solstices, leaving the
anti-lions above to fight it out. In this analogy, the
empire is that of knowledge from the father or as previously
referenced, (cloud of the lord), and the red serpent Hades
is that of the mass of emotional energy within us.
We enter rather into Saturn, and that of the earth, and the
mythological path leads us back to Pan, and the panpipes that offer
up the bird songs of the least flycatchers. The gray clouds
may be associated with the two Satyagraha's and one is meant
to be influenced by fear (es-
christ (43)
), and one, more in line with Buddha, where the grasping (
ghrebh-1-
cunning (35)
) is possibly formulated in line with our coordinated being,
grabbing knowledge, and treating it to a kibosh, or a
processing of restraining and sorting. The fear influence is
also perpetrated in the roots that contain the word Christ,
and the pagan feast of stealing holy water is born. (
ghrēi-
curiosity (36)
)
In the Babylonian architecture, and referencing the book,
(see reference), the Capricorn makes his first appearance as
a goat-fish, shown depicted as Ea, or a man walking in a
great-fish-shaped cloak. His bronze statuette is dated
around 430 B.C. and he is playing a syrinx with both hands
with a fish head over his head.
| "One of the Babylonian titles was
"antelope of the subterranean ocean." He was said to rise
from the waters during the day in order to tutor man in
the arts of civilization and to return to the depths at
night. Ea's name means "House of the Water."" "He had
the role of god of knowledge and presided over the work
done by men. Because of this, he was devoutly worshiped by
many different types of craftsmen.
"Sun and Moon Signs - An
indispensable illustrated guide to astrological characteristics "
by Julia and Derek Parker |
Another reference to the panic room or that of fear is made
in the book related to Capricorn, and the story around the
many different feelings of Pan, and this may also be
associated with the shortest day of the year, and the wanton
for more sun. The many references to masculinity may nix
some aspects of femininity in this manifestation. The legend
of the chase for Syninx, begins the transformation into the
reeds or panpipes as her father was Ladon, the river god,
and needed her help.
---
Part one:
Humdinger
22-anthelion-aphelion-girasol-heliacal-helio-helium-insolate-isohel-parasol2-parhelion
-perihelion-sol-solanine-solar-solarium-solstice1-south-southern-sun-sunday
-sundew1-turnsole-et-sāwel-
also s(u)wæl-, su(æ)æl-, su(æ)en-, sun-, the sun,
Contracted from *saæwel-, Variant forms *swen-,
*sun-, [ Old English- sunne, sun, Middle Dutch sonne,
sundew1,
sun, both sourced Germanic *sunnōn- ]; Old English-
sunnandæg, Sunday, sourced Germanic compound *sunnōn-dagaz,
"day of the sun" (translation of Latin diēs sōlis),
Old English- sūth, south, and sūthern,
southern, sourced Germanic derivative *sunthaz,
"sun-side", south; Variant form *s(æ)wōl-, SOL3,
SOL1,
SOLAR, SOLARIUM, GIRASOL, INSOLATE, PARASOL, SOLANINE,
SOLSTICE, TURNSOLE, from Latin sōl, the sun; Suffixed form
*sāwel-yo-,
HELIACAL, HELIO-, HELIUM, ANTHELION, APHELION, ISOHEL,
PARHELION, PERIHELION, From Greek hēlios, sun [Pokorny
sāwel-
881] humdinger*, humor* (parasol1
- peræ-1-) (sundew2
- dheu-1-) (solstice2
- stā-) |
~anthelion-
a luminous, white, halolike area occasionally seen in the
sky opposite the sun on the parahelic circle, Greek anthēlion,
from neuter of anthēlios, opposite the sun : anti-,
anti- + hēlios, sun, [ref:
anteroom- outer room opening
into another room]This is the
marker for the anti-lions turned sideways, and also it seems "anti-christ", and
evidently, the psyche state of mind in relation to it, and
that of the "black sun", of which we already know that
bhel-1- can be
any color it wants. So in reality, this is some kind of
upper mating ritual that is replacing the natural one
between anthers and their reception, and may be related to the "emotion of
fear" where fear and envy hide behind each other's mask.
per-3-
hammerlock (33)
Reference linguistics:
aphaeresis- to take away + take away, ( example: till
from until )
~aphelion-
the point on the orbit of a celestial body that
is farthest from the sun, from New Latin aphēlium
: Greek apo-, apo- + Greek hēlios, sun
You will be able to see a relationship
between the passage of time by comparing the truer aphelion
point in a chart of analemma (2004 declination of the sun) I
found
here, about half way down the page, and note the
"southern" relationship to this root group, and that the
summer solstice rests at the smaller apex. Now, put on
your seatbelt, and turn the analemma sideways, and it will
plug directly into the original noesis map perfectly. This
may also be associated with the masculine rearrangements
incorporated into it. It also seems the science around the
analemma phenomenon is increasing in interest. The
differences we "feel" seem pronounced in its passage.
~girasol- also girosol, see fire opal
(brilliant, flamelike yellow, orange, and red colors), also
girasole, see Jerusalem artichoke, Italian
girasole, sunflower, opal : girare, to turn (from
Late Latin gyrāre, see
GYRATE) + sole, sun (from Latin sōl)
The girosole may be related to the girl
scouts, and that of the feminine influence in the southern
man, as Capricorn has been known for this influence. The
North American sunflower is no pet goat, it is a sunflower (
Helianthus tuberosus ) having yellow, rayed flower
heads, and edible tubers, from girosol. There are four total
Jerusalem's, one a flower, one a shrub (cherry), a weed
(oak), and a tree (thorn). See herbs at
www.euthenist.org by
clicking on one of the five stigmas.
~heliacal-
or or related to the sun, especially the
sideways rising and setting of the sun,
from Late Latin hēliacus,
from Greek hēliakos, from hēlios, sun
~helio-
or heli- prefix, sun: heliocentric,
Greek hēlio-, from
hēlios, sun
~helium-
Atomic element #2, Symbol He; gaseous element
obtainable as colorless, odorless inert product containing
radioactive ores deduced from
the solar spectrum; major uses: natural gas,
artificial atmospheres, laser media, refrigerant, balloons
for lifting; superfluid for cryogenic research, from Greek
hēlios, sun
Reference:
-deduce- trace origin, root
deuk-; wanton, dock,
subdue, educate, borehole in the boscage*
~insolate-
to expose to sunlight, Latin
īnsōlāre, īnsōlāt- : in-, in; see IN-2 (within) +
sōl, sun This can
immediately be correlated to the insole, or
innersole, which matches the outline of the analemma
declination as the bottom of the foot, or the footprints
left in the sand.
~isohel-
a line drawn on a map connecting points that receive equal
amounts of sunlight, ISO- (equal) +
hēlios, sun, [ref: isohel
needs research, hard to find data] data for gyrations:
insolation graph
~parasol2-
a light, usually small umbrella carried as protection from
the sun, French, from Italian parasole : parare,
to shield (from Latin parāre,
to prepare; see peræ-1- + sole,
sun, from Latin sōl
This may also be a minor reference to that of the parents:
peræ-1-, and the Parcae of Fates
"who assign one's destiny", while also an analogy to having
two feet both in analemma, and sideways.
~parhelion-
a bright spot sometimes appearing on either side of the sun,
often on a luminous ring or halo, Latin parēlion,
from Greek : para-, beside; see PARA-1 + hēlios, sun
Parahelic circles are the
ability of light and water to create luminous crystals in
the sky, and the pariah is what is caste in the view,
from parai, festival drum. Pariah- social
outcast: "Shortly Tom came upon the juvenile pariah of
the village, Huckleberry Finn, son of the town drunkard"
(Mark Twain - AHD) One does wonder if these two outcast
lions are that of the two annexes in the analemma, where
Aries meets up with the Lion's tail at the spring and fall
equinoxes.
~perihelion-
the point nearest the sun in the orbit of a planet or other
celestial body, alteration of New Latin perihēlium :
PERI- + Greek hēlios, sun
Earth's orbit is not that oblique,
rather each measurable point in the perihelion and aphelion
points are close to being equal, where other planets in our
solar system have varying obligations.
|
|
~sol- sol3:
fixed- monetary unit formerly used in Peru, worth
1/1000 of an inti, Spanish, sun (from the drawing on
the coin), from Latin sōl,
sol1:
no derivative, Music: the fifth tone of
the diatonic scale in solfeggio, Middle English, from
Medieval Latin, see GAMUT sol2:
no derivative, a French coin worth 12 deniers,
French, from Old French, from Late Latin solidus,
solidus, see SOLIDUS, sol4:
no derivative, label for colloidal solution,
Sol- the sun, Middle
English, from Latin sōl
The ultimate denial may be that of religion and its
inevitable close ties to the Twelve Houses of the Zodiac as
the basis for its systems, and there is also the gamma ut,
the first note of the lowest hexachord created after (ut,
the first word in Latin hymn to Saint John the Baptist)
which ascended in the scale as follows: CDEFGA- Ut
queant laxis resonare fibris Mira gestorum
famuli tuorum. Solve polluti labii reatum.
Sancte Iohannes. (Note: it is also the suffix -gamous
which relates to having specific types of marriages or bonds
related to reproduction and gamy is the smell of game
and foolery.)
References: (more about Gregorian chants:
Ancient Intents Hidden Within the Solfa Scale )
Today: ut, re, mi, fa, sol, and la (six count
version)
Also: do, re, mi, fa, so, la, and ti (original seven)
Note: dig into ISOTM
~solanine-
a bitter poisonous alkaloid C45H73NO15, derived
from potato sprouts, tomatoes, and nightshade and having
narcotic properties formerly used to treat epilepsy, French,
from Latin sōlānum,
nightshade, from sōl, sun
~solar- of, related to, or proceeding from the sun:
solar
rays; semiconduction; used or operated through the use of
the sun: solar heating; semiconductor; determined or
measured in reference to the sun: solar year; conductor,
Middle English, from Latin sōlāris,
from sōl, sun
~solarium-
earth; a space or room (gallery), exposed to the sun; green
house; Latin sōlārium,
terrace, flat housetop, from sōl, sun
To elaborate, we live in a solarium, as
a semiconductor of the sun and as the intaglio, of which we
are a part of, and gravity plays the role of the insulator,
see gravity, root gweræ-1-;
baryon, charivari, brut, blitzkreig, davot1*
The intaglio is the impression that we leave upon life
seemingly frozen in the stone.
~solstice1- the
points at which the earth's wobble is at its greatest
distance from the sun in relation to the equator, peaking
above each tropical latitudes, Tropic of Cancer on or about
June 21 (longest day), and the Tropic of Capricorn, on or
about December 21 (shortest day) of each year; the highest
point of culmination; Middle English, from Old French, from
Latin sōlstitium :
sōl, sun, see sāwel- + -stitium,
a stoppage; see root stā-
The root group stā-,
which contains approximately 70-80 words is predominantly
concerned with restoration and the lablab*, or that of labor
in relation to truth stemming into knowledge, and while also
offering the insolate starboard presence feeding from the
domestic animal, which is us. It speaks of a fixed time,
and a third person standing by, and contains
Theraveda, and the navigation of how to wed-2- which seems
directly related to the ansate cross.
~south-
fixed- a reading on a compass of the cardinal point
opposite north; navigation; if standing upright, a point at
which concentrates insolation between the body and the
force; something that seems below where you are; a
consideration of a region: we had moved so far south, the
north wind began to blow; Middle English, from Old
English sūth
~southern-
claus- situated in, toward, or facing the south;
coming from the south region: southern breezes; native to or
growing in the south region; being south of the equator;
(being south of the north pole?); Middle English
southerne, from Old English sūtherne
As you can see, using this kind of
language outside ship navigation is a bit crazy, as all
human life is already south in every sense, and this feeling
cannot be removed from the senses unless one is floating and
blind.
~sun-
the star that is the basis for all life on earth sitting at
the center of the solar system providing heat and light
located approximately 93 million miles from our planet, and
measured across the ball is a diameter of 864,000 miles, and
in comparing visual mass, it is 330,000 times the size of
earth; radiant energy; Middle English, from Old English
sunne The dictionary omitted that the sun sits at the
center of the solar system, and this may be associated with
the wanton worship of the Phaëthons of
the diesis, or day worshipers of the dead.
~Sunday-
the first day of the week; institution of the sabbatical
year (being unaware; see Gregorian card deck of 52 weeks); a
day of ridicule for those who are different or did not have
the same as the ridiculer, religious ritual of worshiping
the dead, (may they rest in peace, etc.), Old English
sunnandæg
It is simple to worship the dead,
simple promote the lie attached to Christians, and run from
all logic or common sense never accepting the fear
overlaying knowledge, and the beasts will accept you. The
problem however, is at the end of your game, they are like
the Doberman pinchers and they keep you for food. There is a
big difference between saying goodbye to the dead, and
allowing them to share in the knowledge, and religion wears
a dark and dreary mask.
~sundew1-
any of several insectivorous plants of the genus Drosera,
growing in wet ground and having leaves covered with sticky
hairs, also called drosera, Obsolete Dutch sondauw
(translation of Latin rōs sōlis, dew of the sun) :
son, sun (from Middle Dutch sonne; see sāwel-)
+ dauw, dew (from Middle Dutch dau, see
dheu-1-
sexton beetles (50)
In one analogy, it may be that knowledge has eaten the soul
or possibly even sawed off the hand holding the ansate, and
this candle needs relighting.
~turnsole-
any of the various plants that move or are believed to move
in response to the sun; see heliotrope (sense 1a)
Middle English turnsole, purple dye obtained from the plant,
from Old French tournesol, from Old Italian
tornasole, heliptrope : tornare, to turn (from
Latin tornāre; see TURN)
+ sole, sun (from Latin sōl)
References:
-heliotrope- any of the several plants of the genus
Heliotropium, especially H. arborescens,
native to Peru and having small, highly fragrant purplish
flowers, also called turnsole; The garden heliotrope; any of
the various plants that turn toward the sun; see
bloodstone; Color: a moderate, light, or
brilliant violet to moderate or deep reddish purple, Middle
English elitrope (from Old English eliotropus)
from French hēliotrope, both from Latin
hēliotropium, from Greek hēliotropian : hēlio,
helio- + tropos, turn, see TROPE
-bloodstone- a variety of deep-green chalcedony
flecked with red jasper, also called heliotrope
-trope- figure of speech, hyperbole, metaphor, see
root trep-; contrive, entropy, man on
horseback*
In one sense, and from the original
story written by "George Lucas", it was Luke who saw himself
inside the head of his father, and this may be analogical to
the two higher beasts consuming each other, as the flora
turns to face the fauna, but to consume it as the sundew.
See root bhel-3-; flora, fauna,
blood, Auriga* |
Part two:
A.D.
34-acerate-acerbic-acerose-acetum-acicula-acid-acidanthera-acme-acrid-acrimony
-acro-acromion-acumen-acute-aglet-amphioxus-awn-carvacrol-eager-ear2-edge
-egg2-egglantine--ester-exacerbate-hammer-heaven-mediocre2-oxalis-oxygen
-oxyuriasis1-paragon-paroxysm-vinegar-et-ak-
sharp, Suffixed form *ak-yā,
Old English- ecg, edge, sharp side, Germanic-
*agjō, Old Norse- eggja, egg2,
to incite, goad, Germanic- *agjan, Suffixed form *aku,
Old English- æhher, ear2,
spike, ear of grain, Germanic- *ahuz-; ACICULA,
(ACUITY), ACUMEN, ACUTE, AGLET, EGLANTINE, Latin- acus,
needle; Latin- acus, acerose, chaff; Suffixed
form *ak-men-, stone, sharp stone used as a tool,
with metathetic variant *ka-men-, with variants:
*ka-mer-, Old English- hamor, hammer,
Germanic- *hamaraz; *ke-men- (probably
variant) Old English- heofan, hefn, heaven,
Germanic- *hibin-, "the stony vault of heaven,"
dissimilated form of *himin-; Suffixed form *ak-onā-,
independently created in: Old Norse ögn, awn,
ear of grain, and Old English agen, ear of grain,
Germanic- *aganō; Greek- akonē, paragon,
whetstone; Suffixed lengthened form *āk-ri, ACERATE,
ACRID, ACRIMONY, EAGER1, CARVACROL, VINEGAR, Latin- ācer,
sharp, bitter; Suffixed *ak-ri-bhwo-, ACERBIC,
EXACERBATE, Latin- acerbus, bitter, sharp, tart;
Suffixed (stative) from *ak-ē-, Latin- acēre,
acid, to be sharp; Suffixed form *ak-ēto- (ACETABULUM),
(ACETIC), ACETUM, ESTER, Latin- acētum, vinegar;
Suffixed form *ak-mā-, ACME, (ACNE), Greek- akmē,
point, Suffixed form *ak-ro-, ACRO-; (ACROBAT), ACROMION,
Greek- akros, topmost; Suffixed o-grade form *ok-ri-,
Latin- ocris, mediocre, rugged mountains;
Suffixed o-grade form *ok-su-, AMPHIOXUS, OXALIS,
OXYGEN, OXYURIASIS, PAROXYSM, Greek- oxus, sharp,
sour [Pokorny 2 ak- 18, 3. kem- 556], acupuncture
doubtless*, dover's powder* (ear1 - ous-) (egg1 - awi-)
(mediocre1 - medhyo-) (oxyuriasis2
- ors-) |
|
~acerate- Acerose, from Latin
ācer-, sharp
~acerbic-
sour or bitter; as in taste, character, or tone: "At
times, the playwright allows an acerbic tone to pierce
through otherwise arid or flowery prose." (Alvin
Klein - AHD); bitter, from Latin acerbus
~acerose-
needlelike, as the leaves of pine; acerate, New Latin
acerōsus,
incorrect use
(as if from Latin acus, needle, or ācer, sharp) of Latin
acerōsus, full of chaff, from Latin acus, acer-, chaff
This may seem chaff as comparing
grain in lengthened forms, as ears of corn, or
needles on the whitebark pine, which protrude out as their
own stems of green, which only a point may feel sharp only
on the ends, as other types of fodder.
~acetum- Vinegar, an acetic acid solution of a
drug,
Latin acētum, (also see acetic acid, CH3COOH
which is the prominent ingredient of acetum)
~acicula-
a slender, needle-like part of structure, such as the spines
or bristles of some plants and animals and the crystals of
certain minerals, Latin, hairpin, diminutive of acus,
needle ~acid-
Chemistry: any of a large class of substances whose
aqueous solutions are capable of turning blue litmus to
indicators red, of reacting with and dissolving certain
metals to form salts, and of reacting with bases or alkalis
to form salts; a substance that ionizes in solution to give
the positive ion of the solvent; a substance capable of
yielding hydrogen ions; a proton donor; an electron
acceptor; a molecule or ion that can combine with
another by forming a covalent bond with two electrons of the
other; a substance with a sour taste; Latin acidus,
sour, from acēre, to be
sour References:
-alkaline-earth metal- metallic elements: calcium;
strontium; magnesium; barium; and baryllium, and radium,
also called alkaline earth
-alkali- carbonate or hydroxide of a alkali metal;
from Arabic al-qalīy, the ashes of saltwort
-alkahest- hypothetical universal solvent sought by
alchemists from Paracelsus (1493-1541)
-pH- (potential hydrogen) numerical measurement of
acidity or alkalinity, 0-14 scale, neutral equals 7
~acidanthera-
any of several ornamental African plants of the genus
Acidanthera, having fibrous corms, swordlike leaves, and
large, fragrant flowers with straight tubes, also called
peacock orchid, New Latin : Greek akis, akid-,
needle + anthere; see anther
Reference:
-velamen- Anatomy: membranous covering or
partition; velum; Botany: the spongy, multiple
epidermis that covers the aerial roots of epiphytic orchids
capable of absorbing moisture; Linguistics:
retracting the back of the tongue, velar sound
-corms- food-storing underground stem, Greek
kormos, a trimmed tree trunk, see root sker-1-;
incarnate, cenacle (last supper), shrub, (rough plant),
score, integument*
~acme-
the highest point (of reception?), as in perfection; summit,
Greek akmē The human
body does seem to gyrate around the equilibrium points of
normal function within the measurable rate of alkalinity or
acidity, but it may also be possible for the psyche to
remain aclinic, as to lean to each side in disarray, where
each state is an acknowledgement versus affirmations, the
latter being the knowledge bound, and the prior lost in
space, and in a feeding mode leading to anaclisis. See root
klei-
EMS (21)
This may be also analogical to the
analemma turned sideways.
~acrid-
implant, (tagging knowledge as
parody without proper melody of understanding); unpleasant;
(see bitter, truth is often first considered bitter until
one has grown up); harsh tone (see anger); from Latin
ācer, sharp (probably modeled on
ACID?) The sound of this word
gives it away, and to "ak rid", or rid the observer of
thinking which is often felt as bitter, but this may be
"the split", and then the dogs move in, and the tsimmes,
where you become food, or the bitten off morsel, all the
while your boat is sinking.
Reference: bitter- root bheid-; boat,
atlas* (vertebra of the neck)
~acrimony-
implant, (tagging nature as
ill, when this often just stupidity overlaying
communication; see sycophant); Latin
ācimōnia, sharpness, from ācer, sharp
Greek Mythology: It was Acrisius
who was a king of Argos, father of Danaë who was also killed
by his grandson Perseus, leaving Dan to sort out the mess in
the moaning. The journey up through the generation is
analogical to the journey from the spirit up through
knowledge, and the sycophants clean this coal in their
illusion. Being warned of the "ine"
suffixes by none other than "G", and the synthesizing of
coal into acridine, and
even told this is a suitable topical application of
acridfavine, or the
illusion that smearing coal tar on one's body is a good
thing, is indeed matched by the mien sent by Gurdjieff and
his tales of the Beezlebubs in the cenacle apex. The
acre begins the implants
approaching the acro-.
~acro-
prefix, top, summit: acrosome; height:
acromegaly (see root meg-); extremity of
the body: acrodont, from Greek akros, extreme
Suffixed form *ak-ro-, ACRO-; (ACROBAT), ACROMION,
Greek- akros, topmost;
Warning: this is the same place
as the mothman, and the place often associated with that of
death, and worshipping the ability to kill, even oneself, to
feel the acrobat. -acromion- the outer end
of the scapula to which the collarbone is attached, New
Latin acrōmion, from
Greek akrōmion : akros, extreme +
ōmion, diminutive of
ōmos This is a small bone
extended up form the triangular scapula to meet the arch of
the clavicle or (collarbone) that surrounds the egg-shaped
nodules arising from the arm, and rather elaborately
designed where the combinations of the scapula, arm, and
forearm amass their own technology. The acronyms we create
are the passwords that pose for the sharpening of the
stones.
~acumen- quickness, accuracy, and keenness of
judgment or insight, Latin acūmen,
from acuere, to sharpen, from acus, needle,
see acupuncture
Greek Mythology: It is Creon, who is the brother of
Iocasta and uncle of Antigone who became the king of Thebes
after the fall of Oedipus, and another trilogy family affair
of madmen class wars where the coat of arms is that of
Maximus, as Thebes is the birthplace of the worship of Amen,
or Amun, still operative today, while science provides that
Thebe is also the 5th planet orbiting Jupiter, the largest
planet often associated with ancient religious powers and
beliefs, and hiding the river god Asopus who often is served
up as aspergillus lost on the island.
~acute-
having a sharp point or tip; needle; a process of jabbing or
rasping; sharp; intensity application used as propaganda;
acute medicine; Music: high in pitch; Geometry:
designating angles less than 90 degrees of measurement;
extreme in sharpness; Latin acūtus,
past participle of acuere, to sharpen, from acus,
needle The propaganda was
cleaned from the definition of acute, as this word is
another possible implant designed to thwart astute,
which requires a brain, not just the shoulders and arms.
Reference: root
wes-1-
monostich (27)
and see what happens
wes-2-
beast (27)
~aglet-
an attachment to the end of a line or thread, as in metal
sheaths, and tubular ornamentation for the lace, cord, or
ribbon which facilitates a passage through eyelets, or
holes, such as the eye of a needle or that of shoe lacing;
Middle English, from Old French aguillette,
diminutive of aguille, needle, from Vulgar Latin *acūcula,
from Late Latin acucula, diminutive of Latin acus,
needle The preparation of the jingle bells is that
of the pair: gweræ-1-
davot1* &
gweræ-2-
deadbeat* which follow the zoon animal through its
life stepping over Daphne, arranged peculiarly to jump start
the counting of the sheep over all other forms of sanity, in
turn, using gravity and grace as a weapon, and may in fact
be hiding the three not so wise men behind the veil of the
Three Graces headed by Aglaia.
~amphioxus-
see lancelet; AMPHI- (on both sides) + Greek oxus,
sharp; lancelet- various small, flattened marine
organisms of the subphylum Cephalochordata,
structurally similar to the vertebrates but having a
notochord rather than a true vertebral column
Greek
Mythology: This loch ness monster story begins with
Arthurian tales of a Knight of the Round table by the name
of Lancelot, who was in love with the Queen Guinevere which
only resulted in war with King Arthur. So it seems Lancelot
was fooled by the dark side similar to the story of the twin
brothers or clones Amphion and Zethus, headed by Zeus, one
building a wall around Thebes and charming the stones into
place with his music of his magical lyre he likely stole
from Apollo. And, this is not so far fetched, as the
amphisbaena is the serpent having a head at each end of its
body, and rooted to
gwā-,
the acrobat, and also the revenue, holding the true
covenant, and also the coven, and that which is perceived to
be cut and dried*
~awn- a
slender, bristlelike appendage found on the spikelets of
many grasses, Middle English awne, from Old Norse
ogn or from Old English agen The art in the
tickle may be that of a fleshhook, or awl, used to prepare
holes, or mark points, as in articulation, so it is not
surprising to see Antigone appearing again with the defining
AWOL, where one is absent from leaving, and trapped inside
the serpent's neck without the clearing of the y-axis.
|
| ~carvacrol-
an aromatic phenolic
compound C10H14O, found in plants such as oregano and savory
and used in flavorings and fungicides, New Latin carvi
(specific epithet of (Carum) carvi, caraway, from Medieval
Latin; see
CARAWAY) + Latin sharp + -OL1 (alcohol or
phenol); [ref: carapace-
hard shell like covering of an organism, may be seen as slow
or fast]
~eager-
keen or refined curiosity, or impatient
expectancy, or intense
desire, or
brute force; (see Note at
anxious, to torment, root angh-
alecto (45));
Obsolete, tart, sharp, cutting, rash, Middle English
eger, sour, sharp, impetuous
(violent), from Anglo-Norman
egre, from Latin ācer
~ear2-
the seed bearing spike of a cereal plant, such as
corn, Middle English, ere, from Old English ēar; ear1- sound auriform*, Anatomy: vertebrate and
invertebrate organs isometrically adjacent found in mammalian
used for sound equilibrium without favoring either side under
normal circumstances, each ear divided into three parts,
external, middle, and inner; invertebrate organs resembling
that of the external organ of mammalians; a form of
refinement related to the sound of music; the flexible tuff
above the eyes of certain birds, such as owls, that have
nothing to do with hearing, also called ear tuff; something
considered a handle or a synopsis of navigation in order to
influence others: he was acutely attentive; a process
of collecting dirt or wax that can be applied to others:
the Republicans had his ear all bloody; (see impromptu;
in prompt two); Middle English ere, from Old English,
ēare, see aus-
firedog (24)
The cereal plant may be from Cerberus, the three-headed
dog guarding the entrance to Hades, and may be analogical to
the noggin between the shoulders, and the cersus terminal
reception, but this is often displayed in creosote form. See
root ker-2-; crescent, recruit, boy, girl, concrete,
sincere; dowager's hump*
~edge-
implanted use, (see blade;
bhel-3- auriga*);
edge effect: Ecology:
propagation of the beasts;
divisive obstruction creating classes
specifically to entice alterations (greater diversity but
only divisively, as stated, destroying two key elements
for sound existence); Synonymous arrangements:
penetration; desire; rim; extremity; margin; border; point
of transition; awakening; sharpen, Middle English egge,
from Old English ecg
"Any political and economic system that does not operate in
accordance with the three basic laws of ecology is doomed to
failure. These laws are (1) The law of diversity, (2) the law of
interdependence and (3) The law of finite resources." -
Captain Paul Wilson
[ link ]
This is NOT
ecology
as defined by the diction, and clearly being manipulated,
and removing compassion for the fire, in that
"interdependence" is a right that should be free, and
according to the facts of life, can never "always" be
perfectly measured between the masculine and feminine
demeanors. These euthenical feelings must also apply to all
of life, not just the homo sapiens.
~egg2-
well-being; encourage, Middle English eggen,
from Old Norse eggja, egg1-
embryo surrounded by nutrient material; (mammals, birds,
reptiles, amphibians, fishes, or insects) capable of risking
everything on a single venture; spermatozoon; movable well;
bowsprit, a fellow or person; Middle English
egge, from Old Norse
egg; [ref: albumen- that
which surrounds the yoke] also egg1-
awi- apollo (39)
~egglantine- see
sweetbriar, Middle English eglentin, from Old
French eglantine, diminutive of aiglent, from
Vulgar Latin *aculentum, from neuter of *aculentus,
spiny, from Latin aculeus, spine, from acus,
needle
References:
-sweetbriar- Eurasian rose ( Rosa eglanteria )
having prickly stems, fragrant leaves, bright pink flowers,
and scarlet hips, also called eglantine
-spine-
character, courage, or willpower, from Old French
espine, from Latin spīna
Root references: es-
christ (43)
peiæ-
continental divide (35)
~ester-
any of a class of organic compounds corresponding to the
inorganic salts and formed from an organic acid and an
alcohol, German, short for Essigäther
: Essig, vinegar (from Middle High German ezzich,
from Old High German ezzīh, from Latin acētum
+ Ather, ether (from Latin aethēr, see ETHER)
References:
-ether- any class of compounds in which two
hydrocarbon groups are linked by an oxygen atom; a volatile,
highly flammable liquid C2H5OC2H5 derived from the
distillation of ethyl alcohol with sulfuric acid and widely
used as a reagent, a solvent, and an anesthetic, also called
diethyl ether; Physics: an all-pervading,
infinitely elastic, massless medium formerly postulated as
the medium of propagation of electromagnetic waves, Middle
English, upper air, from Latin aethēr
-ethyl- univalent organic radical C2H5, ETH(ER) + -YL
~exacerbate-
implant, (never-always as
implemented); outside of to make harsh (see grow up, and
Bates hotel), Latin exacerbāre,
exacerbāt- : ex-
(outside of, former, not) + acerbāre, to make harsh
(from acerbus, harsh)
You will immediately feel this word
is screwy, and the edge reappears, and the swinging of the
blade. Irritation has many labels, and has many masks. Inner
struggle is necessary, and the psychopath will vie for
shooting the frog turning the ether to blood which only
creates the need for more. Knowing this, it would be wise to
avoid its use, and also note those who use it or implement
oppressive testing of it to hide the fact that one must
examine oneself more than depend on others to perform this
task as a cloud of deceit for everyone perceived.
~hammer-
a hand tool used to exert momentum by using motion/force
with a perpendicular swinging action attached to a head made
of relatively heavy, rigid material such as steel or iron;
various tools using this power as a striking tool;
hammerlock; firing pin; wooden pieces of a piano that strike
the strings inside the piano; various apparatuses that
perform this task for the dowagers; malleus;
application of this force into the psyche: "Wind
hammered at us violently in gusts." (Thor Heyerdahl
- AHD), Middle English hamer, from Old English
hamor Reference:
-malleus- Anatomy: the hammer-shaped bone that
is the outermost of the three small bones in the mammalian
middle ear, also called hammer, see root melæ-;
mill1, maul, molar2, mole4, millstone, blin, fisher*
-momentum-
meuæ-
regal (22)
updated
-impetus- impelling force, see root ped-;
symptom, harry*
~heaven-
a perception of "what is" presented in the firmament of the
mind, and seen often as the sky between the cold dark space
which holds the universe in its place; abode of God (see
Love), the angels (see planets), and the souls of those who
are granted salvation (right of
salvage, see root sol-);
an eternal state of communion with God (see knowledge;
school; truth); everlasting bliss (spiritual joy; see
blithe implanted for
blitzkreig confusion; example:
Warren addressing inauguration);
a process of bringing about what is thought to be desired
but actually is nested in a form of pleasure that is either
sought, or demanded; Middle English heven, from Old
English heofan The word heaven, rests between
heave and heavy, which should help in discerning
its truer meaning, and that of the mind that heaves the joy
out of the depths of the water only to find it is too heavy
to hold up for any length of time. The beasts throw a veil
over this entire area, as the "always-never" of the
blitzkreig, and the flash of stubbornness is set forth.
Root References:
bhel-1- atomize*, authentic*, B cell*; gweræ-1-
davot1*; kap-; behoof, captivate,
hawk1, deceive, dirge*;
sol-; solicitous, salute, salvage, catholic,
sage2, cade oil*
~mediocre2-
implanted use, division between
what is thought to be ordinary and what is thought to be
rugged mountains (always-never) application, French médiocre,
from Latin mediocris : medius, middle; see
medhyo- + ocris, rugged mountain, see
ak- A great example
of this is offer up in the animated stories told by the
greatest artists in the visual arena, and the battle between
the ass and the ocher, and the valley serves as the new
vault of heaven.
Root Reference:
wel-2-; Helen, walk,
to roll (in mud), devolve, valley of the
dolls*; medhyo-; (intermediate zone
lying between heaven and hell), fond*
~paragon-
a sharpening of excellence that seems peerless; black
medic; to compare as to match or equal; nonesuch;
unflawed diamond weighing at least 100
carats; Printing: type size of at least 20
points; big font; Obsolete French, from Old French, from Old
Italian paragone, from paragonare, to test on
a touchstone, perhaps from Greek parakonan, to
sharpen : para-, alongside; see PARA-1 + akonē,
whetstone The diction will
immediately tell you that it is to be of "no equal" while
also telling you to "match or equal" as the black magic
between the median plane dead center in your psyche, and
elaborated by the nature of your being, and a way to confuse
you about it with diamonds forever which is only useless
junk. Once the love is removed, is is now worn down by the
Egyptian paper rush as par for the new course of death and
worshipping the dead as a way of removing knowledge for the
beasts. Root reference: peræ-2-;
parcel, par, nonpareil, hammer*
~paroxysm-
an awakening of danger expressed: the emotional paroxysm
of neo-life; Medicine: awareness of an attack,
recurrence, or intensification of disease: a paroxysm of
ponerization; Middle English paroxism, periodic
attack of a disease, from Medieval Latin paroxysmus,
from Greek paroxumos, from paroxunein, to
stimulate, irritate : para-, intensive prefix; see
PARA-1 + oxunein, to goad, sharpen (from oxus,
sharp) The Parousia is labeled "the second coming" from
Greek presence, Parousia, from feminine present participle
of pareinai, to be present : para-, beside;
see PARA-1 + einai, to be, root
es-
christ (43)
As one can see, this is the masculine and feminine formation
arising from the soul, where both absence and presence are
affirmed in the union of the seeker.
From the Gospel of Thomas
(19) Jesus said, "Blessed is he who came into being before
he came into being. If you become my disciples and listen to
my words, these stones will minister to you. For there are
five trees for you in Paradise which remain undisturbed
summer and winter and whose leaves do not fall. Whoever
becomes acquainted with them will not experience death."
~oxalis-
any of the numerous plants of the genus Oxalis, having
cloverlike compound leaves with three leaflets and variously
colored flowers that are usually clustered in umbels, also
called wood sorrel, Latin oxalis, wood sorrel, from
Greek, from oxus, sour, see sorrel- three
leaflets (R. acetosella), also called dock,
and Soren Peter Lauritz Sorensen, Danish chemist who devised
the pH scale.
~oxygen-
Atomic Element #8, Symbol O; nonmetallic element
constituting 21 percent of the atmosphere by volume that
occurs as a diatomic gas O2, and in many compounds such as
water and iron ore. It combines with most elements, is
essential for plant and animal respiration, and is required
for nearly all combustion, valance 2, French oxygéne
: Greek oxus, sharp, acid + French -géne, -gen
~oxyuriasis1- infestation with pinworms,
New Latin Oxyuris, type genus (Greek oxus,
sharp; see ak-) + Greek oura, tail; see
ors-) + -IASIS (produced by taeniasis,
tapeworms)
The root ors- is that of the ass, and also the
squirrel, and those who seek nuts between the sheatfishing.
~vinegar-
an impure dilute solution of acetic acid obtained by
fermentation beyond the alcohol stage and used as a
condiment and preservative;
enthusiastic but also ill tempered;
violated vim; Middle English
vinegere, from Old French vinaigre : vin,
wine (from Latin vīnum)
+ aigre, sour (from
Vulgar Latin *acrus, from Latin ācer, see
vinegaroon, Scorpion, 8 legs with a long tail
The root vine is a
heavily trampled palindrome of major use, such as bovine,
divine, etc. The di- in vine is a marker for
"two vines" and the centaury is born, and the worship of the
beasts aligned on each side, both male and female mirrored
upon each other. One possible analogy to this bazaar story
is the Jolly Green Giant who climbs up the vine into
the sky above. "Fi Fi Fo Fum, I smell the blood of an Englishman; If he
have any liver and lights,
I'll have them for my supper tonight." |
Part three: Red Admiral
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9-aqua-aquarelle-aquarium-aquatic-aqui-ewer-gouache-island1-sewer1
-et-akw-ā-
water, Old English- īg, īeg, island, Germanic-
*aujō, "thing
on the water" from *agwjō; AQUA, AQUARELLE, AQUARIUM,
AQUATIC, AQUI-, EWER, GOUACHE; SEWER1, Latin- aqua, water [Pokonry
akuā- 23] red admiral*, "House of the water" Ea*
(island2 -
lendh- fevertree*) (sewer2
- sed-) |
|
~aqua-
water, an aqueous solution; Color: a light bluish
green to light greenish blue, Middle English, from Latin;
aqua-, prefix, no derivative, water: aquaplane,
from Latin aqua, water
~aquarelle-
a drawing done in transparent water colors, French, from
obsolete Italian acquarellla, water color, diminutive
of acqua, water, from Latin aqua
This seems associated with another root in sound, resting
next to paste, and pastel.
Roots: kwes- to pant, quarrel1,
"bellows", and kwēt-
discuss, in composition, to sprinkle
~aquarium-
see ocean; a device to
trap life so that other life can see it as it wishes, and
often used for profits by
playing on the emotions and spirit of victims; public
exhibition of animal life slavery,
see zoo; glass enclosure for
small fish, Latin aquārium,
source of water, from neuter of
aquārius, of water, from aqua, water, See root
gheu- to pour libation, transfuse,
fond*
Is it any surprise that Aquarius follows Capricorn, or
commonly referred to as the "Water Bearer" also labeled in
the stars in the Southern Hemisphere near Pisces and Aquila?
And, also seems to lead straight to the alter, or Ara, and
Arabic scales of sound and law?
~aquatic-
consisting of, related to, or being in water: an aquatic
environment; living or growing near a planet that has
water: aquatic animals and plants; that which applies
to living beings that live both on land and near water,
Middle English aquatique, from Old French, from Latin
aquāticus, from aqua,
water
~aqui-
prefix, water: Aquila; from Latin aqua, water,
Aquila- Northern Hemisphere near Aquarius and Serpens
Cauda, Middle English, from aquila, eagle, the
constellation Aquila
~ewer-
a pitcher, especially a decorative one with a base, an oval
body, and a flaring spout, Middle English euer, from
Anglo-Norman, from Vulgar Latin *aquāria,
from Latin aquārius, of water, from aqua, water
The ewe is a female sheep, a
lamb that has grown up, from Old English ēwe, and
only missing the v to make the word eve. It is from
the (root owi- ovine, bishop's weed*), and the
ovine is neighbors with the Ovimbundu, who seem to know
about vim, and its proper location. All the prefixes of
ovi- are that of egg-laying mammals, or that of eggs
hatching outside the body, so it will be interesting to see
how sheep has been implanted between the fur and feathers as
a poet of Ovid in the Art of Love (c. 1 B.C.) and the
Metamorphoses (c. A.D. 8) seems to be carrying some of the
weight.
~gouache-
a method of painting with opaque water colors mixed with a
preparation of gum; the use of this type of pigment when
executed in this manner, French, from Italian guazzo,
from Latin aquāyiō,
watering, from aquātus, past participle of aquārī,
to fetch water, from aqua, water
There seems a strong relation to
this fetching of water and the herdman's (meat) called
goulash, which may have nothing to do with blood or flesh at
all, rather water over gouging the ge into the spine.
~island1-
a land mass, especially one smaller that a continent,
entirely surrounded by water, especially in being isolated
or surrounded; Anatomy: a cluster of cells differing
in structure or function from the cells constituting the
surrounded tissue; something that resembles an island
effect: a counter that forms an island in a dry kitchen;
islands of people living on the empty prairie; the floating
steel in the water of life; insulate or insolate;
Alteration (Influenced by ISLE) of Middle English ilond,
from Old English īegland : īg,
īeg, see akw-ā-)
+ land, see
lendh- fevertree*
Note: it is the isle
that insulates, and the god in the man that is the dry
martini that is never shaken, and always stirred.
~sewer1-
an artificial, usually underground, stone or concrete
structure used to carry waste mixed with water, while also
claiming rainwater, Middle English, from Anglo-Norman
sewere, from Vulgar Latin *exaquāria
: Latin ex-, ex- + Latin aquāria, feminine of
aquārius, pertaining to water (from aqua, water) see
akw-ā-; sewer2: a
medieval servant who supervised the serving of meals, Middle
English, from Anglo-Norman asseour, from asseer,
to seat guests, from Latin assidēre, to sit down :
ad-, ad- + sedēre, to sit, see sed-;
sewer3:
one that sews; seamstress The
medieval servants still exist today as greeters of greed,
which is for sale. This seems to hide all the clues in the
brown, and one cannot figure which squirrel is which, or if
that is just a chocolate nut. Sewers form great bonds
between the beasts and man, and the act of being lazy which
has been accepted over water of life.
The captain of the heart is the red
admiral, which is a butterfly ( Vanessa atalanta )
from Medieval Latin amīrālis, admīrālis, both
from Arabic; 'amīr a 'ālī, high commander. This may
be confused with blazing saddle envy itself, and that of
killing as a sport of progress when it may be more like
sitting on her head to manifest the courage, hope, and
disposition of love. |
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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