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Sea Change ~ Joi
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2-see1-sight-et-sekw-2-
to perceive, Old English- sēon,
Germanic *sehwan, to see, Old English- sihth,
gesiht, vision, spectacle, from Germanic abstract noun
*sih-tiz, idiopathic**, See-saw*
(see2 - sed-) |
~see1- saw?, perceive
and/or
apprehend with the eye, analogous detection, mental
image, considered to be, knowing through physical experience,
foresee, taking note of, understanding, comprehension,
Synonyms: behold, note, notice, espy, descry,
observe,
contemplate, survey, view,
perceive,
discern,
and remark; Middle English- sen, from Old English
sēon, [ref:
see root sed-, Vulgar Latin- *sedem,
from Latin- sēdes, seat, also sitzkrieg,
stubbornness as war*]
~sight-
field of vision, something seen, foreseeable future (intuition),
to aim,
direct one's gaze, from Old English- sihth, gesiht,
something seen? |
|

© ebookopen.com "Twosun, Amazia"
Follow the sacred stone journey through the sun into the
First House of Aries. This journey will end in Aquarius, and
the perverse and rebellious Uranus, and then, you'll be
ready to go again, "here's your compass", the
beast says. |
In search of - The Sapient Stone Language
Chapter Twelve:
Sea Change - Two Fish in a Flattened Sea
|



|
The Gods of War,
Neptunus Meta-magic, Medusa is lussa,
Silver and Gold, Vesa and Vera, The lodestone in the belly
of Aries, Mars and Venus, the malignment flirt,
fermentation of the barrier, four clovers in mind, three in
heart, the three fate lines
"He saw some
service on the king's side" [Tucker Brooke - AHD] "Her long
reign saw the
heyday of verbal humor." [Richard Kain - AHD] |
|
Part two: Fish Angler #1
|

©unknown
Carp
25 MPH
No veering allowed |
 25-archipelago-cataplexy-complacent-flake-flaw-fluke-leukopalkia
-pelagic-placable-placate-placebo-placenta-placid-placoid-plagal-plagiary
-plagio-planchet-plank-playa-plea-plead-pleasant-please-supple
-et-plak-1-
to be flat, Old Norse- flō, layer, coating,
Germanic- *flōhō, Variant form *plāg-,
fluke, Germanic- flōk, flatfish, Middle
English- flake, Germanic- *flakaz, Old Norse-
flaki, fleki, hurdle, Extended form *plaka, Old
Norse- flaga, layer of stone, from Germanic *flagō-,
Possibly suffixed (stative) form *plak-ē-, to be calm, (as
flat
as the sea), Latin- placērē, to please, be agreeable, Latin- supplex, suppliant (whence
nominative supplicāre, to beg humbly, first attested in
Archaic Latin as sub vos placō, I entreat you; sub,
under; see upo-), Latin- plācāre, to
calm (causative of placēre), PLANCHET, Latin- plancus,
flat, flat-footed, Latin- plaga, net, (<
"something extended"), Greek- plagos, side, Greek- plax, flat, flat land, surface,
Greek- pelagos, sea, fish angler #1* |
This
section will be updated
~archipelago- islands of the sea
~cataplexy- fixation of the eyes, astounding awe simulated as
pleasing, such as a bright colored toy
complacent: self service, complaisant
~flake- being different, oddball, or battle guard on the side
of keel
~flaw- concealed unsoundness, splinter in your mind, slab of
stone
~fluke- using a bi-flow device as a stopping mechanism
~leukopalkia- white patches of
blotches on mucous membranes, Greek- plax, plak, flat
area
~pelagic- from or going to the open ocean
~placable- Latin- placābilus, calmed or pacified by input,
compliant, yielding, adaptable
~placate- allay sound anger, appease, pacify or calm the anger
~placebo- a world full of calmed expectation to get a well with the
world, often comes in lower forms
~placenta- the well, special delivery dept. [includes free
warning system]
~placid- an undisturbed well, may contain alligators, see
Alligators Muscles, compare to whales
~placoid- toothy slabs, scales, mini-measurerers,
[measuring with shape as in the whale tail]
~plagal- Greek- plagios (ēkhos), plagal (mode), Greek-
oblique, from playgos, side; a range in tone from the
fourth below to the fifth above in it's final tone, a cadence
subdominant chord, deviation, inclination* or going around*
~plagiary- plagiarism, playing as adult, but not adult yet,
still stealing from old programs; is now lived with information
on a large scale never before seen and passed off as real;
creating your own reality by duplicating others thoughts as your
own in varied ways; accepting influences as real and trying to
be like them in expression to build false pride
~plagio- inclined, oblique, breaking, sodium, calcium, and
aluminum silicates, over the top
~planchet- Middle English- plauunche, plank, a flat or round
slab, Late Latin- planca, feminine: plancus
~planchette- see planchet? 3 legs only? [Begin
reading The Wave]
~planet- circular nonluminous visible body of substances formed
only where it coincides cohesion to stars, see pelæ-2-
~plank- One Seven Inch Thick Teak slab, can't break that! Good
for broiling fish.
~playa- an imaginary well you live in
~plea- an earnest request
~plead- ready to argue about it, amusement for beasts
~pleasant- the inner abuse of pleasure in the mind, an illusion
~please- an offer that is multi-colored
~supple- see placable, easily altering the psyche
offer-et-bher-1-, also wer-2-, miss, she
male |
The group of words above should have you excited! This seems
the best format don't you think? This group was
targeted at last minute as the sea became flat, and the bait was
set, and pow! Your psyche is under SHARK ATTACK! The mind
considers many things as real especially as a child, and
flirting DOES NOT instill curiosity, it replaces it! Today, the
local TBCN free channel, the one people have to pay for, ran an
ad from the Toy Institute and they were promoting
curiosity in their wording, a clear violation of dignity to the
soul at a minimum, but more, it is part of the fear campaign
being implemented by the net thrown out in the maze.
Curiosity is not for toys, it is for
knowledge that is created from within.
Possession is reinforced by the illusion of pride. I realize
channels like TBCN who run "DemocracyNow" every day at noon need
money, and I'm glad they received it, but the wording in the
commercial was blatant disrespect. The toys are no more than
placebos for real life. They lead directly to the imaginary well,
and this is part of the beast in the system, as toys are a
CRITICAL area of concern and control for PTB'ers. Why? Children
are extremely capable and extremely underrated, and they are
capable of learning at warp speed. This means they can literally
in a few short weeks surpass areas of concern becoming smarter
than the control system. They are in fact the cattle of the
perceived future. Just look at what China does.
As the system continues to crumble
beneath the columns of the pyramid power structures, people will
begin to purchase less of these kinds of items, and this will
begin to open a new door. This new door is feared. Unfortunately
for them, they are too late. It has already begun. All the money
spent now will be wasted and could have been rethought, and
products made that actually made sense, but no, the beast lives.
Part three: Fish Angler #2
|
 
malleable -
mutable
bending your spoon |
 10-apoplexy-complain-fling-paraplegia-plague-plangent-plankton
-plectum-plegia-plexor-plak-2-
to strike, Nasalized variant forms *pla-n-k,
*pla-n-g-, FLING, Middle English flingen, to
fling, Scandinavian source akin to Old Norse flengja,
to flog, whip, Latin- plangere, to strike
(one's own breast), Variant form *plāg-,
PLAGUE, Latin- plāga, a blow, stroke,
CATAPLEXY, Greek- plēssein, to beat
down flat; fish angler #2*
DANGER TIP: Look for the
heart |
|
This section will
be updated
~apoplexy- neurological disorder,
surge of anger, stroke
~complain- express
resentment, to lament, Old French-
complaindere, complaign
~fling- violently casting aside,
thinking like the flinch
~paraplegic- paralysis of the
lower body side affected by
the spine alterations
~plague- a widespread affliction not necessarily visible,
calamity, vast annoyances
~plangent- to suggest sadness,
lament, to strike, to feel grief while killing it at
the same time for purposes of the beast system
~plankton-
food from one side of the ocean,
not the deeper
section; wandering, to turn aside
~plectum- bone or plastic to pluck the strings of musical
instruments
~plegia- monoplegia, a
bi-polar blow, assuming the created fork now has a
tune versus tone
~plexor- rubber hammer used for pounding something without
hurting it that now has a point |
| The addictions to the fermented barrier
are carefully designed for you.
Addicted to black chocolate? Me too. Why do you think they make
it black when it is white coco? This is the use of aversion and
we're going to dig out that section soon. The calm line in the sea is the frieze as
represented in the Aquarius symbol where the two lines are
jagged instead of two straight lines, showing the fermenting of
the sea. The water and air when
combined with fire and earth brings forth our love for this
place. We paint the picture freely as seen in the frieze which
is a representation of life.
|

"On cupcakes sold at Publix" |
From the Gospel
of Thomas
(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."
Your nature to need nourishment is part
of life. You can get that nourishment partially from the gifts
of earth in the form of water, air, sleep, and food, and love is
formed. This formation is the target in whatever form you
manifest. It is part of your drive, and is like taking away your
whole life in one quick swoop, gone forever. Do you want it
back?
The love you formed in is never
forgotten, and never lost. It is thread into our destiny as the
atropos of metathesis, the three fate lines. The
fish angler suggests a fate for you which is opposite another.
You're been played like a piano. You may need a new Flight Plan
with 5 special parts. The next thing you know, they will tell
you that your children don't exist, they have been collected up
from the schools for interrogation[1], and before long, no
school will not be affected in dramatic fashion.
There is a sea change in the air. The
media is already feeling massive heat especially newspapers and
people are pulling back, and they are losing control. Think.
When did all this begin. Is this phase two of an earlier phase,
maybe around early 1970? Not too long after John and Bobby, and
Martin, were out of the way?
As it stands, the police stating method
shows phase two methodology when looking at the bigger picture
of time phases and methods of corruption.
Beast Phase one:
!. Kill our enemies
1. Distract, insert grease
2. Expand corruption into entire system, COINTELPRO, ETC.
Beast Phase two:
1. Expand corruption globally
2. Distract, insert grease by killing our enemies
3. Grease failure, insert force, kill them all
Our minds have been spaghetti sauce for
our entire lives. It's not fair what they did. Their kind breeds
and they are not the kind of soul that would ever want to
manifest, so they are diseased and see the body as a toy, just
as we are now experiencing in their toy wars.
Part four: Three Fates
revised 2008JULY18
90-abscond-affair-affect-apothecary-amphithecium-anathema-antithesis-artifact-artifice
-benefaction1-bibliotheca-chafe1-cleistogamous-comfit-condiment-confect-counterfeit-diathesis
-deed-deem-defeat-defect-difficulty-do-doom-duma-efface-effect-endothecium-epenthesis
-epithet-face-facetious-facient-facies-facile-facsimile-fact-faction-facticious-factitive-factor
-factotum1-faculty-fashion-fic-feat-feasible-feature-forfeit1-hacienda-hypothesis-incondite-infect
-malefactor1-manufacture1-metathesis-multifarious-nefarious1-office-officinal1-omnifarious
-orifice1-parenthesis1-perfect-perithecium-prefect-profit-putrefy1-prosthesis-prothesis-purdah1
-rarefy-recondite-refect-ruberfacient1-satisfy1-sacrifice-sconce-spinifex-suffice-surfeit-synthesis
-theca-thesis-theme-thetic-tick-tubifex-tumefacient1-et-dhē- to set, put,
Contracted from *dheæ-, O-grade form *dhō-, DO1,
FORDO, Old English dōn, to do, Germanic- *dōn, Suffixed form
*dhē-ti-, "thing laid down or done, law ,deed", Old English
dæd, Germanic- dēdiz, deed, doing, Suffixed
o-grade form *dhō-mo-, [Old English-
dōm,
doom, judgment, (< "thing set or put down"),
Old English- -dom, -dom, abstract suffix
indicating state, condition, or power, (see ka-) Old Norse dōmr, condition,
Russian Duma, Duma, Germanic source akin to Gothic dōms,
judgment, Old English- dēman-,
deem, to judge, Germanic denominative dōmjam,
all sourced Germanic dōmaz], Suffixed o-grade form
*dhō-t-
(see sak-) Latin sacerdōs, priest, "performer of sacred
rites", Zero-grade form *dhæ-, prefixed form *kom-dhæ-, Latin- condere,
recondite, to put
together, establish, preserve, (*kom, together, see
kom-),
prefixed and suffixed form *kom-dh(æ)-yo-, Latin-
condīre, condiment, to season, flavor, compound *kred-dhæ-
(see kerd-), suffixed zero-grade form dhæ-k-,
FETISH, AFFECTION, AMPLIFY, BENEFIC, BENEFICE, BENEFICENCE,
BENEFIT, CONFETTI, DEFEASANCE, DEFICIENT, EDIFY,
EFFICACIOUS, EFFICIENT, MALFEASANCE, MISFEASANCE, PETRIFY,
PROFICIENT, SUFFICIENT, VIVIFY, Latin facere (<
*fak-yo-), to do, make and Latin combining form -fex
(< *-fak-s-), "maker", FACADE, FACET, FACIAL, DEFACE, SURFACE, Latin
derivative faciēs, shape, face, (<
"form imposed on something"), Latin
compound officium, office, (< *opi-fici-om), service,
duty, business, performance of work, (*opi-, work;
see op-), further suffixed form *dhæ-k-li-, FACILITATE, Latin-
facilis (< Old Latin facul),
feasible, easy, Suffixed zero-grade form *dhæ-s-,
(possible identical with zero-grade form *dhēs-),
NEFARIOUS, Latin- fās,
divine law, OMNIFARIOUS,
Latin- -fārium, adverbial suffix, as in bifārium,
in two places, parts, double, from *dwi-dh(æ)-, "making
two", (*dwi-, two, see dwo-),
Reduplicated form *dhi-dhæ, Greek- tithenai, to put,
with zero-grade noun thesis (*dhæ-ti-), a placing,
and verbal
adjective thetos (*dhæ-ti-), placed, Suffixed form
*dhē-k-, THECA, TICK3, BODEGA, BOUTIQUE, Greek thēkē,
receptacle, Suffixed
zero-grade form *dhæ-mn-, THEMATIC, Greek- thema,
theme, "thing placed", proposition, Reduplicated form
*dhe-dhē, SANDHI, Sanskrit-
dadhāti, he
places, Basic form *dhē-, Old Persian- dā,
purdah, to place,
Suffixed form *dhē-to-, set down, created, (see
s(w)e-), Old Iranian compound
*khvatōdāta-,
create from oneself, reduced form *dh- (see
au-), breakfront**, three
fates*
(benefaction2
- deu-2-) (chafe2 -
kelæ-1-) (factotum2 - teutā-)
(forfeit2 - dhwer-)
(malefactor2 - mel-3-)
(manufacture2 - men-2-) (officinal2
- op-) (orifice2 - ōs-)
(parenthesis2 - en) (putrefy2 - pΰ-) (purdah2
- per-1-) (nefarious2
- ne) (ruberfacient2 - reudh-)
(satisfy2 - sā-) (tumefacient2
- teuæ-) |
~abscond- to leave quickly and secretly and hide
oneself, avoidance of detection, Latin abscondere, to hide,
: abs-, ab-, away, see AB-1 + condere, to put
~affair-
something done or to be done, business, transactions, public
business, occurrence, event, social function, object or
contrivance, personal concerns, public controversy, scandal,
romantic or sexual relationship, Middle English affaire,
from Old French afaire, from a faire, to do :
a, to + faire, to do, Synonyms: business,
concern, lookout, aesthetic control knob*
~affect-
affect1: to have an influence on or effect a change, acting
on the emotions of, touch, attack, infest, Psychology:
feelings of emotions as distinguished from cognition,
thought or action, feelings that have active consequences,
Obsolete- disposition, feeling, or tendency, Latin
afficere, affect-, Synonyms: influence,
impress, touch, move, strike, [Note:
affect and effect supposedly
have no senses in common; effect means to bring about,
execute, and
affect1 to influence.]
affect2:-
put on a false show, simulate, pretend, imitate, Middle
English affecten, from Latin affectāre, to
strive after, frequentative of afficere, affect-,
to affect, influence, assumed behavior,
altering the emotions, activation of the red serpent*
--affection-
show of pretense, or display, assumed behavior,
artificially, particular habit, adopted to give false
representation, Synonyms: affectation, pose, air,
mannerism
Comment: Since we have no
choice but to use our existing power and utilize desire in
life, we must also realize the truth of how we affect, and
know how precious that communication is by refusal of
participating in the allusion when it can mislead more than
guide.
~apothecary- one that sells drugs and other
medicines, pharmacist, Middle English apotecarie,
from Old French apotecarie, and from Medieval Latin
apothēcārius, both from Late Latin, clerk, from Latin
apothēca, storehouse, from Greek apothēkē :
apo-, away + thēkē, receptacle
~amphithecium-
outer layer of cells of the spore-containing capsule of a
moss, New Latin : AMPHI- + Greek thēkion, diminutive
of thēkē, receptacle
~anathema- declaim, blackball,
excommunication, vehement curse, dammed, explicit resentment
expressed, revile, loathe, shun, Late Latin- accursed thing,
from Greek anathēma, from anatithenai, to
dedicate
~antithesis-
direct contrast, opposition, figure of speech containing
contrasting ideas are juxtaposed in a balanced or parallel
phrase or grammatical structure, the second stage of
Hegelian dialectic process, representing the opposite of the
thesis, Late Latin, from Greek, from antititheticus,
to oppose
~artifact- object produced or shaped by human craft,
especially a tool, weapon, or ornament of archaeological or
historical interest; typical product or result, "The very
act of looking at a naked model was an artifact of male
supremacy." (Phillip Weiss - AHD), Biology: structure or
substance not normally present but produced by an external
agent or action such as a structure seen in a microscope
specimen after fixation that is not present in the living
tissue, Latin arte, ablative of ars, art; see ART1 +
factum,
something made
~artifice- artful or crafty expedient,
stratagem, subtle but base
deception,
trickery, cleverness or skill,
ingenuity, French, from Old French, craftsmanship, from
Latin artificium, from artifex,
artific-, craftsman : ars, art-,
art; see ART1 + -fex, maker, Synonyms:
trick, ruse,
wile,
feint, stratagem,
maneuver, dodge; contrived for
a desired effect, shifty,
treacherous, deceptive act,
"The labyrinth... was built by Daedalus, a most skillful
artificer." (Thomas Bullfinch - AHD)
~benefaction1-
conferring aid, charitable gift or deed, Latin benefacere,
to do a service, see root deu-2-, and polka partner
benedictus: canticle that begins Benedictus
Dominus Deus Israel, "Blessed be the lord god of
Israel"; religious proclamation based on invalid data [ref:
faction: contentious organization]
~bibliotheca-
collection of books, a library, a catalog of books, Greek-
biblio-thēkē, book + case
~chafe1- to wear
away or irritate by rubbing, annoy, vex, to warm by
friction, worn or sore from excess, Middle English,
chafen, from Old French chaufer, to warm,
from Vulgar Latin *calefāre, alteration of Latin
calefacere : calēre, to be warm, see kele-2-
+ facere, to make, Synonyms: abrade,
excoriate, fret, gall
~cleistogamous-
Botany: a closed spherical ascocarp, New Latin :
Greek kleistos, closed (from kleiein, to
close) + Greek thēkion, small case, diminutive of
thēkē, receptacle
~comfit- confection of fruit, nut, or seed
covered with sugar, Middle English confit,
from old French, from Latin cōnfectum, thing
prepared, neuter past participle of cōnficere, to
prepare [Note: confiture is also a
confection with the polka partner confiteor, which is
to confess, cōnfitērī, to acknowledge]
~condiment-
sauce, relish, or spice used to season food, Middle
English, from Old French, from Latin condīmentum,
from condīre, to season
~confect-
make into a collection or preserve, put together by
combining materials, a sweet confection, such as candy,
Middle English confecten, to prepare, from Latin
cōnficere
~counterfeit-
to make a copy of with the pretense of fraud, intended to
feign, carry out deception, pretend, simulated,
Middle English counterfeten, from contrefet,
made in imitation, from Old French contrefait, past
participle of contrefaire, to counterfeit
~diathesis-
hereditary predisposition of the body to a disease; label
for a grouping of a symptom, Greek, disposition, condition,
from diatithenai, to dispose : dia-, dia- +
tithenai, to place, set [ref:
dia- prefix, through, across]
~deed-
to carry out an act or action, praiseworthy, feat, exploit,
performance in general; conveyance, bond, contract for
ownership, Middle English dede, transferring imaginary value*
~deem-
to have as an opinion,
judge, regard as interpreted,
think, consider, Middle English
demen, from Old English,
dēman, manifesting the
imagination
as real*
~defeat-
win victory over, prevent
the success of, thwart, make void, annul,
failure to win, null, Middle
English- defeten, from defet, disfigured,
from Old French desfait, past participle of
desfaire, to destroy, from Medieval Latin disfacere,
to destroy, mutilate, undo
~defect-
something lacking that prevents perfection or acceptance,
inadequate, failure, shortcoming, blemish; disown loyalty to
one for another, abandon a particular position, Middle
English, from Latin dēfectus, failure,
want, from past participle of
dēficere, to desert, be wanting
Comment: Wanting is not
always necessarily associated with something that has a
defect, as though you would want to fix it, for example,
many concepts are so screwed up, they can never be fixed, or
would anyone want to fix them, and they may be ignored.
~difficulty-
condition of requiring considerable effort, arduous,
"To entertain is far more difficult than to enlighten."
(Anthony Burgess - AHD), hard to comprehend, laborious
effort, struggle, disagreement, dispute, Middle English
difficulte, from Old French dificulte, from Latin
difficultās, from difficilis, difficult :
dis-, dis- + facilis, easy, Synonyms:
hardship, rigor, vicissitude
◊~do-
DO1: perform, execute, fulfill requirements, carry out,
commit, produce especially by creative method, mimic, bring
about, effect, render, put forth, exert, behave, conduct,
act, Middle English don, from Old English dōn,
DO2: the
first tone of the diatonic scale in solfeggio
~doom- decision or
judgment, especially an official condemnation to a severe
penalty; fate that is perceived as ruinous; inevitable
demise; Judgment Day; statue or ordinance; condemn; to beat down flat dignity*,
see dek-, decorating the dogma*; also
wes-2-
beast (27)
~duma- Russian
national parliament during czarist times, Russian, of
Germanic origin
~efface-
to rub or wipe out; erase; to make indistinct as if
by rubbing; conduct oneself inconspicuously; Middle English
effacen, from French effacer, from Old French
esfacier : es-, out (from Latin ex-,
ex-) + face, face [ref:
conspicuous- what is obvious?;
see root spek-; horoscope, the keep*]
Comment: What is considered
obvious by one person may be completely different than
another, and this ability to hide one's true face is currently
helping to destroy our society and sustenance for life.
~effect-
something brought about by a cause or an agent, a result;
the power to produce an outcome; a scientific
law, hypothesis, or phenomenon; advantage, avail; condition
of being in full force or execution; something that produces
a specific impression or supports a general design or
intention; a particular impression and or expression; the
basic or general meaning; import; movable belongings; goods;
bring about; see (notes at affect), in essence to all
purposes, product a result; Middle English, from Old French,
from Latin effectus, past participle of efficere,
to accomplish : ex-, ex- + facere, to make
~endothecium-
Botany: inner tissue of an anther or a moss capsule, New
Latin : ENDO- + Greek thēkion, diminutive of thēkē,
chest, receptacle
~epenthesis- Linguistics: insertion of sounds in
the middle of words such as the word thunder, Latin Latin, from
Greek, from epentithenai, to insert
~face- the surface of
the face, the forehead to the chin, and from ear to ear, the receptor*;
a person; a person's countenance; grimace; outward
appearance, value in standing to others; effrontery;
impudence; significant or prominence in facial features;
surface presented to view, facade; marked side; the right
side, as in fabric; Geometry: a planar surface of a
geometric solid; any of the surfaces of rocks or crystals;
to designate position; confront with complete awareness;
"What this generation must do is face its problems."
(John F. Kennedy - AHD), to cause to be turned toward, to
line or time the edge of; to smooth a surface; to attain
mastery over or overcome by confronting in a resolute,
determined manner; confront an unpleasant situation; accept
consequences; direct communication, the initial perception
from appearance alone; Middle English, from Old French, from
Vulgar Latin *facia, from Latin faciēs;
Synonyms: countenance, kisser,
mug, pan, physiology, puss,
visage
~facetious- playfully jocular;
jest, French facétieux, from facétie, jest,
from Latin facētia, from facētus, witty,
excessive integrity*
~facient-
suffix, causing, bringing about: somnifacient;
something that causes or brings about: abortifacient;
from Latin faciēns, facient-, present
participle of facere, to do
~facies-
Biology: the general aspect of outward appearance, as
of a given growth of flora; Medicine: the appearance
of expression of the face, especially when typical of a
certain disorder or disease; Geology: a rock or
stratified body distinguished from other by its appearance
or composition
~facile- done or achieved with little
effort or difficulty, easy;
effortless ease, fluency;
nimble; arrived at with
due care; readily manifested,
together with an aura of insincerity and lack of depth,
Archaic: pleasingly mild, as in disposition or manner;
Middle English, from Old French, from Latin facilus, false slogan
~facsimile-
an exact copy, reproduction, as in a document; a method of
transmitting duplicate images on a mass scale; image
transmission; exactly reproduced; Latin fac simile,
make similar : fac , imperative of facere, to
make + simile : neuter of similis, similar
Comment: Humans mass produced
facsimiles of matter that is thrown away, thus, this
practice is unsuitable for planet earth and only contributes
to our diseased relationship with earth, which sustains our
livelihoods.?
~fact- information
presented as objectively real; an actual event or
occurrence; demonstrable existence; quality of being real or
actual; a thing that has been done; Law: the
collection of data and presented as evident; in reality or
truth, actuality, Latin factum, deed, from neuter
past participle of facere, to do, the objects coordinated from the subjects which shows the
path without sub-institutions* [ref:
Usage note: Facts are normally considered true, but
the use of the facsimile has changed the use of the word
fact by allowing compiled data, even statistics, to be
considered factual, when rightly so, this type of collection
of data is falsely presented without considering the overall
understanding of how facts should be applied to data. An
example would be this project, and the collection of data
from the dictionary, which in itself in not fully factual.
The amount of truth is a degree, and measurement that can
steadily increase or decrease in accuracy in the exoteric
cycle.]
~faction-
faction1: a group of persons forming a cohesive, usually
contentious minority with a larger group; conflict within a
government, organization, or nation; French, from Latin factiō,
factiōn-, from factus, past participle of
facere, to
do; faction2: no derivative, a form
of literature or filmmaking that treats real people or
events as if they were fictional or uses real people or
events as essential elements in an otherwise fictional
rendition; literary or film that is a mix of fact and
fiction; faction3: suffix,
production; making: petrifaction; Middle English
-faccioun, from Old French -faction, from Latin -factiō,
-factiōn-, from factus, past participle of
facere, to make
~factitious-
produced artificial rather than by a natural process;
lacking authenticity or genuineness; sham; Latin
factīcius, from factus, past participle of
facere, to make
~factitive-
Linguistics:
of or constituting a transitive verb, such as elect,
that in some constructions takes an objective complement
to modify its direct object, New Latin factitīvus,
from Latin factitāre, to do, practice,
frequentative of facere, to do
~factor- One that actually contributes to
an accomplishment, a result, or a process; element;
one who acts or another who acts; an agent;
money in/money out credit;
Mathematics: one of two or more quantities that divides
a given quantity without a remainder: 2 and 3
are factors of 6; a and b are factors
of ab; a quantity by which a stated quantity is
multiplied or divided, so as to indicate an increase or
decrease in a measurement: The death rate increased by a
factor of 10; Physiology: a substance that
functions in a specific biochemical reaction or bodily
process, such as blood coagulation; explicit determinations;
Middle English factour, perpetrator, agent, from Old
French facteur, from Latin factor, maker, from
facere, to make, the exponentials of the division
capability*
~factotum1-
hired help, employee, or assistant who serves a wider
than normal range of service; Medieval Latin factōtum
: Latin fac, imperative of facere, to do +
Latin tōtum, everything, from neuter of tōtus,
all, [see root teutā-; Dutch, Teuton,
Magic lantern*]
~faculty-
inherent power or ability, any of the powers or capabilities
of the human mind; ability; ability to perform or
act; any of the divisions or branches of collegiate
learning; label for instructors in such institutions; body
of teachers; members of a learned profession; authorization
granted by authorization; conferred power; Archaic:
occupation, trade; Middle English faculte,
from Old French, from Latin facultās, power, ability,
from facilis, easy
Comment: The perceived
authority over others is mindless idiocy. There is only
knowledge and power, and this is what is used, as authority
is an abstract confabulation from the word author and
has been labeled a noun in a way that gives the word
author authority rather power itself or guaranteed
sounder knowledge.
~fashion- prevailing
essence of style in application*; customary behavior;
garment of the current mode; manner or mode; way; personal
or idiosyncratic manner; variety or sort; give shape or
form; to train into a particular influence that creates a
state or character; adapt, as to a purpose or occasion;
to contrive; Middle English facioun, from
Old English facon, appearance, manner, from
Latin factiō, factiōn-,
a making, from factus, past participle of facere,
to make, the accepted behavior that
affects the exponents*
~feasible- capable of
accomplishment; possible; logical, likely, Middle English
fesable, from Old French faisable, from faire,
fais-, to
do, from Latin- facere, coordination-navigation*
~feat- feat1: the
perception of courage, notable; exploit; act or skill;
endurance, imagination, or strength; achievement; Obsolete:
specialized skill; a knack, Middle English fet, from
Anglo-Norman, from Latin factum, from neuter past participle
of facere, to make, do; Synonyms: achievement, exploit,
masterstroke; feat2: Archaic:
adroit; dexterous; neat; trim, Middle English
fet, suitable, from Old French fait,
from Latin factus, done, made, see FEATURE [ref:
dexter- plate or armor worm on right side of body and
viewed on left side of body]
Comment: The polka partner
between feasible and feat is
feast. They rest between
feather and
fear, and serve as a hot point for much study, as the root
pet-, dhēs-, and per-3- are all
having sex in the dictionary, that is to say, they are all
polka connected in a series with feat and feasible.
They all end their run at the word feature.
~feature-
any of the distinct parts of the face, as the eyes, nose or
mouth; overall appearance; prominent or distinctive aspect,
quality, or characteristic; main theatrical presentation;
special attraction; induction;
depiction; outline; picture mentally;
imagine, Middle English feture, from Old
French faiture, from Latin factūra,
a working or making, from factus, past participle of
facere, to make, do, the presence in distinction*
Comment: All of us consumers
should be careful about not letting the power of knowledge
that rests in the material world, and the implementation of
programming associated with these important emotions, to
become a disease of the feature itself.
~forfeit1-
something surrendered or subject to surrender as
punishment for a crime, an offense, an error, or a breach of
agreement; deductible deposit for fees or fines; forfeiture;
lost or subject to loss; be deprived of; giving up rights to
freedom; subject to illegal seizure; Middle English
forfet, crime, penalty, from Old French forfait,
past participle of forfaire, to commit a crime, act,
outside the law : fors, beyond (from Latin forīs,
outside, see
dhwer-;
forest, door, foreign; canaanite*) + faire, to do
(from Latin facere
~hacienda-
large estate or plantation in Spanish-speaking countries;
the house of such an estate; Spanish, from Latin facienda,
things to be done, neuter plural of gerundive of facere,
to do
~hypothesis-
tentative explanation that accounts for a set of facts and
can be tested by further investigation; a theory; something
made to be truth for the sake of discussion or
investigation; assumption,
antecedent of a conditional statement, Latin,
subject for a speech, from
Greek hupothesis, proposal, supposition, from
hupotithenai, to suppose : hypo-, hypo- +
tithenai, to place
Comment: The occasional
subtle relationship between object and subject
is necessarily discernable.
~incondite-
badly constructed, crude, Latin inconditus : in-, not
+ conditus, past participle of condere, to put
together
~infect- contamination of a pathogenic
microorganism or agent; to communicate a pathogen or disease
to; contaminate or corrupt: envy that infected their
thoughts; a society that was infected by racism; affect
in a contagious way; Middle English, infecten, to
afflict with disease, from Latin inficere, infect-,
to stain
~malefactor1- one that has committed a crime, criminal;
evildoer, Middle English malefactour, from Latin
malefactor,
from malefacere, to do wrong : male,
ill, see
mel-3- +
facere, to do
~manufacture1-
processing earth (raw) into a product,
especially by an industrial large scale; processing raw
material with the use of machines; produce mechanically;
concoct or invent; from French *manufactūra : Latin
manu,
ablative of manus, hand, see man-2- + Latin
factūra, working
of a metal, from factus, past participle of facere, to make
~metathesis-
Linguistics: transposition within a word of letters,
sounds, or syllables, as in the change from Old English brid
to modern English bird or in the confusion of modren for
modern; Chemistry: double decomposition, Late Latin,
from Greek, from metatithenai, to transpose :
meta-, meta- + tithenai, to place
~multifarious- having great variety; diverse;
versatile, Latin multifārium, in many places
~nefarious1-
infamous by way of being extremely wicked, Latin nefārius,
from nefās, crime, transgression : ne-, not,
see ne + fās, divine law
~office-
a place in which business, clerical, or professional
activities are conducted; administrative personal; executive
staff; duty as a function; position of authorization; given
trust; subdivision of corporation; public position; a room
for household work; ceremonial or ritual embellishment; The
canonical hours, prayer rituals in Angelic gatherings; rites
of the dead, Middle English, from Old French, duty, from
Latin officium
~officinal1- stocked drugs in pharmacies not requiring extra
time for preparation; recognized by pharmacopoeia; French,
from Medieval Latin officīnālis, of a storeroom or workshop,
alteration of opificīna, from opifex, opific-, workman :
opus, work, see op- + facere, to do, [ref:
root op-; omnium-gatherum, copious, manure,
gondola car**]
Comment: The reference to
opus needs discerning and exposure with the op-
root, but the word officinal seems like it may have
been confiscated for copious reasons (massive greed applied
to biochemical resources for profits) as it may have more to
do with weeds in the back yard, seeds, and other medicinal
herbs that are gathered by a collector for a community, and
not profitable sales attached to bodies.
~omnifarious-
of all kinds and types, from Latin omnifāriam, on
every side
~orifice1- an opening, especially to a cavity or passage of
the body; mouth or vent, Middle English, from Old French,
from Late Latin ōrificium : Latin ōs, ōr-,
mouth, see ōs- + Latin -ficium, a
making, doing [ref: root
ōs-
governor (24)]
~parenthesis1-
either or both of the upright curved lines, ( or ), used to
mark off explanatory or qualifying remarks in writing or
printing or enclose a sum, product, or other expression
considered or treated as a collective entity in a
mathematical operation; qualifying, amplifying a word,
phrase, or sentence inserted within written matter in such a
way as to be independent of the surrounding grammatical
structure; a comment departing from the theme of discourse;
a digression; interruption of continuity; an interval; "This
is one of the things I wasn't prepared for - the amount of
unfilled time, the long parentheses of nothing." (Margaret
Atwood - AHD), Late Latin, insertion of a letter or syllable
in a word, from Greek, from parentithenai, to insert
: para-, beside + en-, in, see en +
itihenai, to put
~perfect-
lacking nothing essential to the whole; complete; without
defect; suited for its purpose; corresponding
mathematically; thorough; utter; Pure; undiluted; unmixed;
Botany: having both stamens and pistils in the same
flower; excellent or delightful; Grammar: of,
relating to, or constituting a verb form expressing action
completed prior to a fixed point in time; perfect sense;
Music: designating the three basic intervals of the
octave, fourth, and fifth; designating a cadence or chord
progression from the domiant to the tonic at the end of a
phrase or piece of music; Middle English perfit, from
Old French parfit, from Latin perfectus, past
participle of perficere, to finish : per-, per- +
facere, to do; Synonyms: consummate, faultless,
flawless, impeccable
~perithecium-
a small flask-shaped fruiting body in ascomycetous fungi
that contains the ascospores, New Latin : PERI- + Greek
thēkion, diminutive of thēkē, case
~prefect-
high administrative official or chief officer; any of
several high military or civil officials in ancient Rome;
chief of police of Paris, France; administrator in charge in
Jesuit school; monitor in private institution, Middle
English, from Old French, from Latin praefectus, from
past participle of praeficere, to place at the hand
of
~profit- advantages gain
or return; benefit; return in investments in open
market enterprises; income received from property; gain;
Middle English, from Old French, from Latin prōfectus,
from past participle of prōficere, make progress, to
profit
Comment: The open world market
allows those who do not have the capability to trade world
cash to reap the blunt of the capitalized disease, moving
the life force up to the nest.
~prosthesis-
an artificial device or mechanism to replace missing body
parts, such as a limb, a tooth, an eye, or a heart valve,
Greek, addition, from prostithenai, to add : pros-,
pros- + titihenai, to put
~prothesis-
Linguistics: the addition of a phoneme or syllable at
the beginning of a word, as in the Spanish espina,
"thorn," from Latin spina, Greek prefixing, from
protithenai, to put before
~putrefy1-
to cause to decay and have a foul odor; decay; to make
gangrenous, Middle English putrefien, from Old French
putrefier, from Latin putrefacere : puter,
putr-, rotten; see pΰ- + facere,
to make
~purdah1- a curtain or screen, used in mainly in India to
keep women separate from men or strangers; Hindu or Moslem
system of sex segregation, practiced especially by keeping
women in seclusion; social seclusion, [Urdu pardah,
veil,
from Persian pardah, from Middle Persian pardak, from Old
Persian *paridaka-, from pari-dā-, to place over
: pari, around, over, see per-1- +
dā-, to place
~rarefy-
to make unavailable by secret stockpiling*; less dense, to
make thin, Middle English rarefien, from Old French
rarefier, from Medieval Latin rārificāre,
alteration of Latin rārēfacere : rārus, rare +
facere, to make, to make rare*
~recondite-
not easily understood; abstruse; ambiguous;
obscure treatment; concealed; hidden, Latin reconditus,
past participle of recondere, to put away : re-,
re- + condere, to put together
~refect-
Archaic: to refresh with food and drink, Latin
reficere, refect-, to refresh
Comment: This word is
quite close in lexeme to reflect, and a sort of
metathesis with the letter L, as in one aspect, you think
only about food and water, and in the other, you may happen
to include more necessary intuition and cognition.
~ruberfacient1-
producing redness, as of the skin, a substance that
irritates the skin; causing redness, Latin rubefaciēns,
rubefacient-, present participle of rubefacere,
to make red; rubeos, red, see root reudh-
~satisfy1- gratifying need, want, desire,
expectation; fulfill desire; the allusion of doubt; dispel;
assure; to discharge debt; conform; make reparation;
Mathematics: to make the left and right sides of an equation
equal after substituting equivalent quantities for unknown
variables in the equation; sufficient; adequate, Middle
English satisfien, from Old French satisfier, from Latin
satisfacere : satis, sufficient, see sā- +
facere, to make
~sacrifice- act of
offering material or spiritual power to a deity in propitiation
or homage, especially in ritualistic blood shed of innocent
animals or humans; victim offered to the beast; forfeiture
of something cherished for the sake of idolatry;
relinquishment of value; Middle English, from Old French,
from Latin sacrificium : sacer, sacred +
facere, to make
~sconce-
sconce2: decorative wall bracket for holding
candles or lights; flattened candlestick that has a handle;
Middle English, from Old French esconse, lantern, hiding
place, from Medieval Latin scōnsa, from Latin
abscōnsa, feminine past participle of abscondere,
to hide away
Comment: the sconce is a
representation of the hiding away as in abscond from the
wall that the very lantern is hanging from. The wall is a
presentation of the mirror between our two psyches.
~spinifex-
any of the various clump-forming perennials Australian
grasses, chiefly of the genus Triodia, growing in
arid regions and having awl-shaped, pointed leaves, New
Latin Spinifex, former genus name : Latin spīna,
thorn + fex-
~surfeit-
to feed or supply to excess, satiety, or disgust; satiate;
Archaic: to overindulge; excessive amount; Middle English
surfeten, from surfait, excess, from Old French,
from past participle of surfaire, to overdo
~suffice-
to meet present needs or requirements; be sufficient; be
equal to a specific task; be capable; satisfy needs;
Middle English suffisen, from Old French
suffire, suffis-, from Latin sufficere
: sub-, sub- + facere, to make, Synonyms:
adequate, enough, [ref:
sub- below, under, underneath, subdivision, less than
complete]
~synthesis-
combining of separate elements or substances to form a
coherent whole; a complex whole so formed; Chemistry:
formation of a compound from simpler compounds or elements,
Philosophy: reasoning from the general to the
specific, particular, or logical deduction; combining thesis
with antithesis in the Hegelian dialectical process whereby
a new and higher level of truth is produced, Latin,
collection, from Greek sunthesis, from suntithenai,
to put together
~theca- case, covering, or sheath, such as the
pollen sac of an anther, the spore case of a moss, or the
outer covering of the pupa of certain insects, Latin,
case, receptacle, from Greek thēkē
~thesis-
a proposition that is maintain by discussion or argument;
dissertation advancing an original point of view as a result
of research, especially as a requirement for academic
status; hypothetical proposition, especially those without
proof; first stage dialectic process; long or accented part
of a metrical foot, especially in quantitative verse; the
unaccented or short part of a metrical foot, especially in
accented verse; Music: accented section of a measure;
Latin, from Greek, from tithenai, to put, Middle
English, from Late Latin, lowering of the voice, from
Greek, downbeat, from tithenai, to put
~theme- topic of discussion, often discourse; to
subject; subject of artistic rendition; short composition;
principle melodic phrase in a composition, especially a
melody forming the basis for a set of variations,
Linguistics: a stem, Middle English teme, theme, from
Old French tesme, from Latin thema, from
Greek.
~thetic- beginning with, constituting, or related
to the thesis in (prosody?); presented dogmatically;
arbitrarily prescribed; Greek thetikos, from
thetos, placed, from tithenai, to put
~tick-
TICK3- cloth case of a mattress or pillow;
light mattress without inner springs; ticking; Middle
English tikke, probably from Middle Dutch tīke,
ultimately from Latin thēca, receptacle, from Greek
thēkē
~tubifex-
any of the various small, slender, reddish freshwater worms
of the genus Tubifex, genus name : Latin tubus,
tube + Latin -fex, maker
~tumefacient1-
producing or tending to produce swelling or tumefaction,
Latin tumefaciēns, tumefacient-, present
participle of tumefacere, to tumefy : tumēre,
to swell, see teuæ- + facere, to make
|
Ok, the above group is now for the most part complete, but I
am sure that I will need to return to this group and make minor
corrections for awhile as it is the largest group so far in the
derivative section.
---
How we got so screwed up is more than a
library can hold. However, we can dig out to the bottom of the
lexeme, and find the way out, or the way in, by spearing the
Minotaur straight on. This is the same as the Attica reunion. It
seems the Ram in Greek mythology and ancient Gothica is
attempting metamorphous in the Grecian architecture from
half-man, half-ram, and also a ram with horns without a face,
both appearing on the Dorick frieze of which has discrepancies
in other records.
Neptune has come along and now is
attempting to mate with a male Ram it seems, and this may the
the Roman god of war depicted for the symbol of Aries in the
psyche of all souls, one who is fighting with itself on the
ribbon of the tally kept.
fact- the objects coordinated from the
subjects which shows the
path without sub-institutions
go to
next chapter
R. Mark Sink 28.3.19
published early: 2008/03/19
updated: 2008/03/25
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Addendum and notes: In the last chapter
we began a series of questions about sound. [What is the difference between the sound generated from the
alpenhorn and the siren?] This will continue
throughout the entire series. For next chapter, How does this
sound relate
to the liberty bell? [alpenhorn- frequency of 262Hz or
'middle C]
The sound in the shell is the reverse of the power in the spirit
brought forward by you though the connection made to the spirit
itself. As the shell grew, the power came forth in the helix,
but what was left was the cups, as in the cups that fill with
teeth trying to get back in.
Sirens are blown through not based on
shape as alpenhorn, but the device blown through at entry point
thus removing the spirit in sound by method of creation, in
fact, beast manifestation. The manifestation uses the power of
the red center and pale center, the physical emphasis for the
animal side, in analogy, it is the wailing of the beasts as they
have found a way to be heard. The little measuring devices now
are using air that is blown by force as the meta-power, in fact,
crossing over the pole. When the musician blows the alpenhorn,
he also uses force, but it is not the force in metathesis with
the shape, but the resulting sound, creating a balanced
expression of metaphysics.
The whale tail works in the same way,
the spirit measured out the metaphysics in attunement of the
growth pattern or evolution path and improving as it went with
the help of the whale. It is the result of the movement of the
tail that creates the result, that being forward motion and
living. The shape shifting was spirit manifested, and here we
see what is perceived as God or Goddess nestled within our own
minds in the way we grow. This power is now being abused
obtrusively and indirectly at the same time as seen in our society.
[1]
4 Year Olds Handcuffed For Disrespecting Nap Time
Additions-
US Woman Hope Steffey Brutalised and Strip Searched by Male
Officers
Strip Search After Hope Steffey Four More Women Come Forward
with Similar Stories
Study reference: Scanning electron
microsopcy (SEM) was used to study the microstructure of raw and
processed cocoa beans (Theobroma cocoa L.). Photomicrographs of
seed coat revealed tracheary elements (spiral vessels)
and simple pits, while the cotyledon of raw bean consists of
parenchyma cells. When beans were roasted to 125 °C for 20 min,
the cotyledon became porous and brittle and the cellular
contents became thermally coagulated. The basification of cocoa
beans with different alkalis, revealed differences in color as
depending on the type of alkali and its concentration.
http://www.springerlink.com/content/w287174787300211/
4 new choruses spotted this chapter,
see lex
decoder
misc comfit-
bull shit, just added
ALTO-perithecium- AYO, ayepalous, seapals within, palis
epenthesis- insertion of sounds in
the middle of words, example: eng lie ish,
diversion*
chafe- envy's lower jaw, useful if
understood, see kele-2-
anathema- deliciousness is
worshipped
artifice- stratagem,
deception, trickery, artificial
multifarious- diverse, versatility inception, in many places
fic- soporific, causing, to
induce sleep, Latin- -ficus
go to
next chapter |
Some of these descriptions include interpretations from the American
Heritage Dictionary of the English Language - 3rd Edition, and
the King James Version of the Holy Bible printed from 1970-1987
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