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"The
glaring discrepancy between American positive law and
natural rights." (David Brion Davis - AHD)
Chapter 64: The Debts Paid for the Black Hole
April 10, 2009:
The power between the a and the o
is seemingly revealed in this chapter, along with the
revelation of the vowels, and their possibilities ahead.
Also, the janitor recently revamped the root
ei-
the joker (14),
which is definitely worth studying, as now we meet up with
the Aether, and this correlates the topaz or extremely
hard-head that is posited. This may have become "Artificial
Emotional Intelligence", which then is seen as
the foxy reality TV. Although, a good taste of the way this feeling
works can be seen in older works as that of Morris Engel,
from "Little Fugitive" onward.
The confusion between these two symbols or stigmas are exemplified
by such as the
a-ignorant prepositions, as up, on, and with
without mentioning upon, or seeing the knockwouts behind
withstand. The hidden treasures are moved, such as the toy
referred to as a "transformer", and the electricity sought
for use and proper navigation, which then is abused.
It also
seems the after-death feeling is adjusted ever so carefully
and negates mathematical nave. Does not everything seem
"before" to begin with? Who are these four?
This power may be vested in the first four letters
symbolized in the lexicon, and in one sense representative
of the power of the four beasts, air, body, sea, and the
devil (see
gwelæ-
PHI (23)), which then can be transferred into the AEI unit.
This
correlates mathematically to the nine angels (think math,
arithmetic) in Chapter Forty Eight: The Chameleons of
Authority, sitting on the right with the devil, and
necessary for the ghost or phantom establishment, and a
completely new sound system, as in the hyssop akin to
Hebrew 'ēzôb,
and you can be assimilated into one unit that has a switch,
or possibly twigs for a dead tree that only has lights when
it is repeatedly plugged in.
Someday, Chapter 11 will be revised to
reflect the complete journey, albeit in a backward fashion.
This begins the alpha bet, or before Christ analogy,
which is now under attack genetically as a form of eugenics,
and using the well. A correlated
hermeneutic navigation page has been constructed.
The route ahead has been determined.
We are headed straight for conscience, which seems a marker
for the arrow, or Sagittarius element that aligns with the
shoring slide, or sideways effects. The journey through the
stones has been based on Exodus 28:16-21 and Revelation
21:19-21 of the King James Version. Two stones remain,
beryl, and chrysoprasus, and amethyst is excluded, as it was
revised after backward evaluation, (see
medhu- foolproof (22)).
Please take your time, as there is
much to think about.
Part one:
Alphabet
35-ab-abaft1-ablaut2-aft-after-apo-apposite-awkward-component-contrapposto
-depone-deposit-dispose-ebb-expound-impose-interpose-of-off-offal-oppose-pogram
-position-positive-post2.3-posterior-postiche-posture-preposition-propose-provost
-puisne1-reposit-suppose-transpose-et-apo-
(also ap-) off, away; [ OF, OFF, OFFAL, Old
English- of, æf, off; Old
English- ebba, ebb, low tide; Old High German-
aba, ablaut, off, away from; AFT, ABAFT, Old
English- æftan, behind, Germanic- *aftan, all
sourced from Germanic *af ]; AB-1,
Latin- ab, ab-, away from; Greek- apo-,
apo-, away from, from; Suffixed (comparative) from
*ap(o)tero-, Old English- æfter, after, behind,
Germanic- *aftiz; Suffixed form *apu-ko, Old
Norse- öfugr, awkward, turned backward,
Germanic-*afug; Possible variant root form *po(s),
on, in, Russian- po, pogram, at, by, next to;
POST-, POSTERIOR; (POSTMORTEM), PREPOSTEROUS, PUISNE,
(PUNY), Latin- post, behind, back, afterward; APPOSITE,
(APPOSITION), COMPONENT, (COMPOSE), (COMPOSITE),
(COMPOSITION), (COMPOUND), CONTRAPPOSTO, DEPONE, DEPOSIT,
DISPOSE, EXPOUND, IMPOSE, INTERPOSE, OPPOSE, POSITION,
POSITIVE, POST2, POST3,
POSTICHE, POSTURE, PREPOSITION, PROPOSE, PROVOST, REPOSIT,
SUPPOSE, TRANSPOSE, Latin- pōnere, to put, place,
from *po-sinere (sinere, to leave, let; of
obscure origin) [Pokorny apo- 53] alphabet* (abaft2
- ambhi-) (ablaut1
- kleu-) (post1
- sta-) (puisne2
- genæ-) |
|
~ab- ab-1;
prefix, away from: aboral, Latin, see apo-;
ab-2;
no derivative, prefix, used to indicate an
electromagnetic unit in the centimeter-gram-second system:
abcolumb [from absolute] one may discern that the
second ab- is also being used overlaying the first, as with
the that posited in Chapter Thirty Two: The Secret
Hidden under the Sphinx's left paw, related to the way the
energy from the sun is harnessed, and sold for profits in
the absolute negative. This may also be harnessed in the
mind, body, soul, and spirit.
~abaft1-
(adverb: in relation to + verbum, word)
Nautical: toward the stern, (prepositions: post positioning:
apo-, application omega) toward the stern
from, Middle English on baft : on, at; see ON- +
baft, to the rear (from Old English beæftan,
behind : be, by, at;
ambhi-
bebe (26))
+ æftan, behind, see apo-
|
|
~ablaut2-
(mutable: nōmen,
nōmin) Linguistics: a vowel change, characteristic
of Indo-European languages that accompanies a change in
grammatical function: for example, i, a, u, in sing, sang,
sung, also called gradation, German : ab-,
off (from Old High German aba; see apo-)
+ Laut, sound (from Middle High German lūt,
from Old High German hlūt), see
kleu- empyrean (26)
A
possible clue would be a position change in the mapping
system according to what is being designated, or is being
attempted as correlation. Try the example given with the map
with the same word, and see how it feels knowing their
positions. [references: A1, E5, I9, 015, U21]
~aft-
(adverb: in relation to + verbum, word)
(mutable adjective: to
add
to : ad-, ad- + iacere,
to throw) Nautical: at, in, toward, or close
to the stern of a vessel, or the rear of an aircraft or a
spacecraft, Middle English afte, back, from Old
English æftan, behind
~after- (prepositions: post positioning:
apo-, application omega) behind in place or
order: ABC; next to or lower than in order of
appearance: backseat came after the driver; in
conquest or pursuit of: always chasing after the shadow;
concerning: time after time; subsequent in time to;
at a later time than: after now; They are still
friends after all their differences popped up; following
continually: year after year; in the style of or
imitation of: satires after Horace; with the same or
close to the same name as; in honor or commemoration of:
named after her mother; according to the nature of or
desires of; in conformity to: a tenor after my own
heart; past the hour of: ten minutes after two;
Nautical: nearer the stern of the vessel;
(conjunctive: longitudes) following or subsequent to the
time that: I saw then after I arrived; (mutable: nōmen,
nōmin)
afternoon, Middle English, from Old English æfter
The dictionary gives the example for
(behind in place or order) as: Z comes after Y. This is true
in only one sense, as A comes after Z also depending on the
viewfinder, as A came first, so it was behind Z in
this sense, as though you had typed it out. If everything in
front of you is seen as after, you may never get there. To
get where you are going, something has to come first, and
one should know or attempt to know what this will be, as a
navigation or plan. The word afternoon, as a
conjunction is only an apposition to time set upon the
median plane, and that of the chalcedony.
~apo-
prefix, away from; off: aphelion, farthest from
the sun (see root
sāwel-
humdinger (52));
separate: apocarpous; without; not: apogamy;
related to; derived from: apomorphime; metasomatic:
apophyllite, Greek, from apo, away from
(adverb: in relation to + verbum, word)
behind; in the rear; at a later or subsequent time;
afterward: departed after we left; Nautical: nearer the
stern of the vessel;
~apposite- (mutated
juxtapose, see
yeug- destabilize*): nōmen,
nōmin)
strikingly appropriate and relevant:
Mars was apposite the creation of the new world order;
Latin appositus, past participle of
appōnere, to put near : ad-, ad- + pōnere,
to put
We all seem to posit, but most often
it has additional hardware attached on each side, as in
appositus. For example, placing after with the
word noon is not necessarily appropriate, or to say:
President Doe, as it seems to often create the
conjunction as a mutation for the apposition in the mind
where reality is removed.
~awkward-
(mutable adjective: to
add
to : ad-, ad- + iacere,
to throw) not graceful; ungainly; not dexterous (see adriot:
ad- + right); clumsy; clumsy or unskillfully performed:
the planet was marred by an awkward American history;
difficult to handle or manage: an awkward speed boat;
difficult to effect: his intelligence was awkwardly
limited; uncomfortable: an awkward horse; marked
by or causing embarrassment or discomfort: an awkward
proposal that seemed appropriate; requiring great tact,
ingenuity, skill, and discretion; an awkward and
inevitable revolution; Middle English awkeward,
in the wrong way : awke, wrong (from Old Norse
öfugr, backward)
Ambidextrous is labeled and defined
as the double dealer, but this is derogatory for the
word itself, and its relationship to interpretation and
navigation, especially palindromes.
~component-
(mutable: nōmen,
nōmin)
a constituent element, as of a system; a part of a
mechanical or electrical complex; Mathematics: one of
a set of two or more vectors having a sum equal to a given
vector; any of a minimum number of substances required to
specify completely the composition of all phases of a
chemical system;
(mutable adjective: to
add
to : ad-, ad- + iacere,
to throw) being or functioning as a constituent or an
ingredient, from Latin compōnēre, compōnēt-, present
participle of compōnere, to put together : com-, com-
(together) + pōnere, to put
~contrapposto-
(mutable: nōmen,
nōmin)
the position of a figure in painting or sculpture in which
the hips and legs are turned in a different direction from
that of the shoulders and head; the twisting of a figure on
its own vertical axis, Italian, past participle of
contrapporre, to set opposite, contrast, from Latin
contrāpōnere : contrā-, contra- + ponōere,
to place
~depone-
(module verbum, word, word) Law: (transitive)
to testify or declare under oath; (intransitive) to
give testimony; Middle English deponen, from Medieval
Latin dēpōnere, from
Latin, to put down : dē-, (de-, see
de- bias*, B horizon*) + pōnere, to
put
~deposit-
(module verbum, word, word) (transitives) to
put or set down; place upon; to lay down or leave behind by
a natural or unnatural process: layers of chemicals
deposited upon the ocean floor; to give over or entrust
as possessive; safekeeping; to place or hide valuables; to
give as a partial payment in a monetary form as a form of
security or credit; a place to have assets accountable but
also used by others, such as a bank; a formation of
debt; depository; an actuation of the mathematical
component within the debt system; Geology: a
concentration of mineral matter or sediment in a layer,
vein, or pocket: rich deposits of
oil; Physiology: an accumulation of
organic or inorganic material, such as lipid or mineral, in
a body tissue, structure, or fluid; a sediment or
precipitate that has settled out of a solution; Latin dēpōnere,
dēpōsit-, dē-,
(de-, see
de- bias*, B horizon*) + pōnere, to
put
The power of debt will entice
commonality within the bias system disposed, for example, if
you forget to pay your credit card bill because the
statement did not arrive, the corporation will demand a late
fee even if you call them, as they expect you to have
unnatural components to the commonality of the machine over
and above all ethics of right or wrong. The fees are a way
to generate additional funds, especially in an environment
where they are loosing money.
~dispose-
(module verbum, word, word) (transitives) to
place or set in a particular order; arrange; to put
(business affairs, for example) into a defined or corrected
order as conclusive; to conjure up a demeanor of obedience
or receptive framing of thought; inclination; influential; (intransitives)
a matter that is settled; disposal; disposition; to transfer
or part with, as by giving, dumping, or selling; to get rid
of; throw out; to kill or destroy: a despot who disposed
of all his enemies, real or imagined; Middle English
disposen, from Old French disposer, alteration
(influenced by poser, to put, place; see POSE1:
assumption) : of Latin dispōnere,
to arrange : dis-, apart; see DIS- + pōnere,
to put
The prefix dis- only has a
few senses, and this one is meant as absence, or "not
apart", which in a larger sense is a lie, as though, out of
sight, out of mind. An inclination can just as easy be a
habitual disease, or one that is designed to gather its
goods.
~ebb-
(mutable: nōmen,
nōmin)
ebb tide; a period of decline or diminution; (intransitives)
to fall back from the flood stage; to fall away or back;
decline; recede; Middle English ebbe, from Old
English ebba
In mythology, the Eblis is
the principal evil spirit or devil of Islamic mythology. The
ebony tree also has an interesting etymology from
Greek ebeninos, from ebenos, ebony tree, from
Egyptian h-b-ny, which is a super hearty dark-colored
tree. The shorter version is ebon, and this may be
associated with the Mayan solar day stones of which its
uncertain who actually made them at this time, where one is
asleep and awake as in the tide, or possibly correlated to
that of the moon phases. One is the ebb, and one the
bbe, but the association that sleeping is hell, and
the awake beta state is heaven in all senses may be
misleading. The numerical equivalent is the 12th day which
may be analogical to to afternoon.
~expound-
(module verbum, word, word) (transitives) to
give a detail statement of; set forth: the word expound
can be transformed in sense by using expounded, or
expounding; to explain in detail; elucidate:
expounded is past tense; expounding is present tense; (intransitives)
to make a detailed statement that arrives by other means,
not necessarily given, but provided; maneuver; Middle
English expounden, from Anglo-Norman espoundre,
from Latin expōnere :
ex-, ex- + pōnere,
to place
Expound is polka partner to
express (see
per-4-
hammertoe (33))
which in the alert sense is explicit in content, but most
often sensed possibly in a hyper state which has been
expounded by the surface media.
~impose-
(module verbum, word, word) (transitives) to
establish or apply as compulsory; levy; law: imposing a
levy upon the working people; To apply or
make prevail by or as if by
authority: impose a continued freedom to oppress;
dictate; to obtrude or force others as the imposing
entity or component; to offer or circulate fraudulently;
pass off: imposed a capital fraud upon the people;
Middle English imposen, from Old French imposer,
alteration (influenced by poser, to put, place; (see POSE1:
assumption) of Latin impōnere,
to place upon : in-, on; see IN-2 (within, see
en- centerfold*) + pōnere, to place
The dictionary also stated that you can
obtrude yourself, which is clearly subjective. Obtrude
is supposedly synonymous with intrude, and is a
member of the root
treud- mantle*, which may imply that a metope
experience is being established, and a creation of a "little
well" that becomes a permanent disorder.
~interpose-
(module verbum, word, word) (transitives)
interruption or insertion between parts or flow; to somehow
place (oneself, I) between; an interjection that is
portrayed as introduction; exert influence as a form of
authority to interfere or intervene: obstructed justice
by interposing useless statements; (intransitves?)
to come between; insertion of probe: updates were
interposed with a suppository sound; French, from Old
French interposer, to intervene, alteration
(influenced by poser, to put, place; see POSE1:
assumption) of Latin interpōnere,
to put between : inter-, inter- + pōnere, to put
check missing synonyms- eb for oersted
|
| ~of- (prepositions:
post positioning: application omega) full smoke
assumptive possessive; derived or coming from;
originating at or from: girls of the east side;
caused by; resulting from: a death of pathocracy;
away from; at a distance from: a star north of here;
so as to be separated or relieved from: robbed of one's
dignity; lies of distemper; from the total or
group comprising: give of one's time; two of his
friends; composed or made from: a machine of cast
iron; associated with or adhering to: a spirit of
truth; belonging or connected to: the rungs of a
ladder; possessing; having: a mankind of delusion;
on one's part perceived: very nice of you; containing
or carrying: a bag of money; specified as; named or
called: a depth of ten feet; a stick of control;
centered on; directed toward: a love of freedom;
produced by; issuing from: products of the vine;
characterized or identified by: a decade of kakistocracy;
with reference to; about: a think of tanks; will
speak of it freely; set aside for; taken up by: a day
of misuse and lost worship; during or on a specified
time: of the past; by: knowledge of secret
emotions; used to indicate an appositive: that idiot
of a driver; Archaic: on; "A plague of all
cowards, I say." (Shakespeare - AHD) Middle English,
from Old English Usage note: Grammarians
have sometimes condemned categorically the so-called double
genitive construction, as in a friend of my father's;
a book of mine. The construction is well supported by
literary precedent, however, and serves a useful purpose.
Thus there is no substitute for the double genitive in a
sentence such as That's the only friend of yours that I've
ever met, since sentences such as That's your only friend
that I've ever met and That's your only friend, whom
I've ever met are obviously impossible.
~off- (adverb:
ad-verbum,
wer-5- moduli*) from a place or
position: flew off; at a certain distance in space or
time: way off; turned off the past year; from a given
course or route; aside; moved off a sound path;
into a state of unconsciousness: dozed off and nearly
crashed; so as to be no longer on, attached, or
connected: shaved off his head; so as to be divided:
marked off the boundaries; so as to no longer be
continuing, operating, or functioning: switched off the
unit; so as to be completely removed, finished, or
eliminated: kill off the chances of peace; so as to
be smaller, fewer, or less: vacuumed off the surface;
so as to be away from work or duty: clocked off;
offstage;
(mutable adjective: to
add
to : ad-, ad- + iacere,
to throw) distant or removed: way off in time;
remote; slim; he perceived the off chance of success;
not on, attached, or connected: her head seemed turned
off; not operating or operational: the power is off;
no longer taking place; canceled; the show was off;
slack: earth was considered off grounds; not
up to standard; below a normal or satisfactory level: the
crest of the wave was blown off; not accurate;
incorrect; your demeanor is off; somewhat crazy;
eccentric: the main stream just seemed off;
started on the way; going: they're off; absent or
away from an expected routine: they we're off every
Monday; being on the right side of an animal or vehicle;
being the animal or vehicle on the right;
Nautical: farthest from the shore; seaward;
off-color; (prepositions:
post positioning: application omega) so as to be removed or
distant from: the ticks fell off the branches; away
or relieved from: he was off down the street; by
consuming: living off locusts and honey; with the
means provided by: the Palestinians were living off bones
and dirt; informal- from: "What else
do you want off me?" (Jimmy Breslin - AHD);
extending or branching out from: limbs fell off the right
side; not up to the usual standard of: the machining
was turned off the natural way; Nautical: to
seaward of: an afternoon off Flemish cap; (modulators)
to go away: off with you; variant of Middle English
of, from Old English
There you have it, it seems the post
position "of" is that of the red center, and "off" is of the
black hole, or that of fear, and the Chinese black sun. Of
note, my mapping has always been reversed, with the
starboard on the left side when facing the diagrams, and for
all positions. Ofay (Pig Latin for foe-) helps
to send this signal also, as with the disparaging
terminology for someone who would be white in color, as
though they were out of position. Offstage
offers up some serious thinking as to the location of the
stigmas for all life and its interactions.
~offal-
(mutable: nōmen,
nōmin)
waste parts, especially of a butchered
animal; refuse; rubbish; Middle English : of-,
off (from Old English, from of + fal, fall
Native American Indians butchered
animals because if they did not, it was likely they would
starve to death in the winter. Today, billions of pounds are
instead grown in vast factories that pollute the earth. In
this arrangement of knowledge turned off and the prolific
self-eating bomb, human kind is likely instead to starve
to death slowly and painfully.
~oppose-
(module verbum, word, word) (transitives) to
be in contention or conflict with: opposing neighbors;
to be resistant to: opposing the emotional boundaries; to
place opposite in contrast or counterbalance; to place so as
to be opposite something else; division that is adjacent
within a spectrum; (intransitive) to act or be in
opposition, Middle English opposen, to question,
interrogate, from Old French opposer, alteration
(influenced by poser, to put, place; see POSE1:
assumption) of Latin oppōnere,
to oppose (ob-, against; see OB-) + pōnere, to put;
Synonyms: fight, combat,
resist, withstand, contest
Knowledge and emotions do not have
to oppose each other, as all questions are not
interrogations, but they seem inclined, and this becomes
intention where it seems necessary, and often becoming a new
art of its own. Synonymously, resistance is not always
opposition, to fight instigates opposition. The other
synonyms seem to have their cleverness of deception based on
their construction and multi-layered meanings.
Ω ~pogram-
(mutable: nōmen,
nōmin)
an organized, often officially encouraged massacre or
persecution of a minority group, especially one conducted
against Jews, Russian, outrage, havoc, from pogromit',
to wreck havoc : po-, adverbial prefix (from po,
next to + gromit', to outrage, wreck havoc (from
grom, thunder)
The grommet is actually a piece of
decorative plastic for a black hole.
~position-
(mutable: nōmen,
nōmin)
a place or location: earth's position around the sun;
the assumption of the right or appropriate place: the sun
rose and set in unison; the location or designation of
specific parts: the bolt was under the pan; the
left brain was positioned to the right; the way in which
something is placed: the position of laws within laws;
an assumed advantageous place or location: beyond the
position of Sandy Hook; a (point of view) or attitude
when encountered: the position of the Lion was to roar;
social standing or status assumed; ranking: the miserable
mind measured positions all day; to be assimilated for a
position in a game; blade runner; commitments made
with no memory: the troops took up positions as though
life was the enemy; to secure a commodity in abstract
and physical formation: the feeding was the position;
(transitive verbum, word, word) to put in a place;
posit; a formation of navigation; Middle English
posicioun, from Old French posicion, from Latin
positiō, positiōn-, from positus, past
participle of pōnere, to place
A posit may not be an assumption at
all. A presumption is when a position is taken in a
propositional noun as (position; belief), which has been
omitted. In other words, there are always at least two sides
to every proposition, and in most cases three or more. The
establishment of the withstanding "I" is always mutable, as
there is always more to learn. It is often thought that a
posit is a position, and it could be only a marker for
navigation, so it becomes difficult to create the double
no-men for the posit, especially in so that it is also just
an idea formation, and time changes them all.
~positive-
(mutable adjective: to
add
to : ad-, ad- + iacere,
to throw) full smoke ascension; a feeling of
acceptance, certainty, or affirmation: the day seemed
positive; the resistance seemed positive;
measured or moving forward or in a direction of increase or
progress; the trash was positive for those forced to deal
with it; explicitly or openly expressed or laid down:
a positive sign of rain; admitting of no doubt;
irrefutable: he would positively die; very sure;
confident: the bridge held while positive moved in
to weaken its structure; sure; overconfident;
dogmatic; formerly or arbitrarily determined;
prescribed; concerned with practical rather than
theoretical matters: their life in the superb seemed
positive; composed of or characterized by the presence
of a particular quality or attribute; real (see
position); Philosophy: of or related to positivism
(assumed sense predominance negating mathematics; see
Auguste Comete); of or related to laws imposed by human
authority rather than by nature or reason alone: "The
glaring discrepancy between American positive law and
natural rights." (David Brion Davis - AHD); of or
related to a metopic stance based on religious revelation
rather than reason or nature alone (see opposing);
attraction or inclination: assumed more the merrier;
Mathematics: related to or designating quantities
greater than a cipher or zero; absolute; related to
or designating the sign ( + ) used in addition; the quantity
or designation opposing the characterization of negative;
Physics: related to or designating electric charge of a sign
opposite to that of an electron; Medical: an
indication of presence of disease, a condition, or an
organism; Biology: indicating or characterized by
response or motion toward the source of stimulus, such as
light: positive tropism; having the areas of light
and dark in their original and normal relationship, as in a
photographic print made from an imprinted negative;
Grammar: of, related to, or being the simple uncompared
degree of an adjective or adverb as opposed to either the
comparative or superlative; driven by or generating power
directly through intermediate machine parts having little or
play: positive drive;
(mutable: nōmen,
nōmin)
an affirmative element or characteristic; Philosophy:
something perceptible to the senses (see mathematics);
Mathematics: a quantity measured in ascension (see
skand- snare trap); Physics: a charge of
this order or type; a photographic image in which the lights
and darks appear as they do in nature, completed surface
image; Grammar: the uncompared degree of an adjective
or adverb; a word in this degree; Music: a division
of some pipe organs, similar in sound to the great but
smaller and less powerful, Middle English, having a
specified quality, from Old French positif, from
Latin positīvus, formally laid down, from positus,
past participle of pōnere, to place
It seems positive ranks high
among confusion. There are at least two words that come to
mind that have not been mentioned. One is assurance, which
leads to insurance, and this may be part of the diseases
related to this concept where mathematics is the secret
one-way master. In electricity, there are only negative and
positive feeds based on the route connection. The electric
charge comes into an outlet on the wall, but sits in waiting
to be used. The negative side relays back the charge until
the charge is used, which then pulls from the source as a
positive feed in your house, and a negative feed from the
meter which registers the results. A new leap (or loop) is
made (see leip- fernestra*;
see page 671 for feminine positions) when you plug in for
power. If these two over react, the ground is designed to
take up the extra charge. The 16th century diagram of the
zodiac also shows this path with the two fish, but it seems
backwards where the body is seeking emotions as feeling, and
the math seeks the spirit up front, such as baseball. This
is a masculine influence and could very well be a mechanism
as posited. Of course, this is something to explore ahead.
~post-
post2:
(mutable: nōmen,
nōmin)
military expansion or outpost;
either of two bugle calls performed in the evening as a
signal to retire to military quarters; assigned guarding;
sentry; a position in public office usually by appointment;
trading post; to put forward; present: post bail;
(see
es-
christ (43);
also contains absent); post3: (mutable: nōmen,
nōmin)
a delivery of mail (machine relay); Chiefly British:
government system to delivery documents, notices, summons,
or other correspondence; post office; Archaic: one of a
series of relay stations along a fixed route, furnishing
fresh riders and horses for the delivery of mail on
horseback; (module verbum, word, word) (transitives)
to mail (a letter or package); to send by mail in a system
of relays on horseback; to inform of the latest news; to
transfer (an item) in a ledger in bookkeeping; to make the
necessary entries in (a ledger) Computer Science: to
enter (a unit of information) in a record or into a section
of storage; (intransitives) to travel in stages or
relays; to travel in speed or haste; to bob up and down in a
saddle in rhythm with a horse's trotting gait;
(adverb: in relation to + verbum, word) by
mail; with great speed; rapidly; by post horse; French
poste, from Old French, relay station for horses, from
Old Italian posta, from Vulgar Latin *posta,
station, from Latin posita, feminine past participle
of pōnere, to place;
post1: Middle English postis, see
root
stā- lablab*
For navigation, the root
stā- lablab* is predominated by the
starboard side, and it seems the second post is possibly
setting up an æ link for the ugly results. The official
documents seem broken in the presence of the Internet,
almost completely foreign to the delivery system.
Information collection is now secret and used by the elite
as a form of profit and breach of personal privacy. It is
almost impossible to not be attached to the mechanisms that
identify, and this certainly seems predominated by envy.
~posterior-
(mutable adjective: to
add
to : ad-, ad- + iacere,
to throw) located behind a part or toward the rear of a
structure; related to the caudal end of the body in
quadrupeds or the dorsal side in human beings and other
primates; Botany: next to or facing the main stem or
axis; coming after in order; following; following in time;
subsequent;
(mutable: nōmen,
nōmin)
the buttocks; Latin, comparative of posterus, coming
after, from post, afterward
When looking at posterity defined as
"future generations", one can begin to see the confusion set
forth in the mantissa that almost seems forced preference of
positivism without considerations, such as numbers among
others. In the truer sense, those humans considered future
also have something called "now" which is primary. If the
future is to be consigned, that is not the case at this
current time as a whole, rather as greed for the postilion.
~postiche-
(mutable: nōmen,
nōmin)
something false; a sham; a small hairpiece; a toupee,
French, from Italian posticcio, from posto,
added (from Latin positus, past participle of appōnere, to place
by, to add : ad-, ad- + pōnere, to place
~posture-
(mutable: nōmen,
nōmin)
a position of the body or of body parts: a sitting
posture; an attitude; a pose: assumed a posture of
angry defiance; a characteristic way of bearing one's
body; carriage: walked with unwavering
coordination; relative placement or arrangement: the
aesthetician massaged the body posture; a stance or
disposition with regard to something (emotions?); a framed
mind (metopic) that affects one's thought or behavior; (intransitive
verbum) to assume an exaggerated or unnatural
pose or mental attitude; attitudinize:
"Those bases are essential to our military posture in
the Middle East." (Gerald Smith - AHD) (transitives)
to put into a specific posture or pose; French, from Italian
postura, from Latin positūra, position,
from positus, past participle of pōnere, to place
Aether in Greek Mythology is
the poetic personification of the clear upper air breathed
by Olympians, or rather possibly the ae link, and
geometrically comparable to the ei- link recently
revamped.
~preposition-
(mutable: nōmen,
nōmin)
Grammar: in some languages, a word placed before a
substantive and indicating the relation of that substantive
to a verb, an adjective, or another substantive as English
at, by, in, to, from, and with; a word or
construction similar in function to a preposition as
in regard to or concerning; Middle
English preposicioun, from Old French preposicion,
from Latin praepositiō, praepositiōn-, a putting
before, preposition (translated of Greek prothesis),
from praepositus, past participle of praepōnere,
to put in front : prae-, pre- + pōnere, to place
Reference from positive:
The uncompared degree of an adjective or adverb; Word
history also notes that prepositions can easily end a
sentence as start one. The prothesis is the addition
of a phoneme or syllable at the beginning (or end) of a
word, as in Spanish espina "thorn," from Latin
spina, Greek, prefixing, from protithenai, to put
before : pro-, before; see PRO-1 + itihenai, to put,
see dhē-
three fates (12)
(chapters 12 and 13 both need updating)
~propose-
(module verbum, word, word) (transitives) artificial emotional intelligence;
to put forward for consideration, discussion, or assumed
adoption; suggest: the status quo proposed that
America had a mind of its own; a formality of
recognition: the propositus element was engrained in the
troops; to offer a toast (to be drunk); the posting of
intention or purpose: it came to be that proposing heat
came a bit too soon; (intransitives) the formation of an
offer to join together in a partnership or companionship
with another human being; Middle English proposen,
from Old French proposer, alteration (influenced by
poser, to put, place, see POSE1:
assumption) of Latin prōpōnere
: prō-,
forth; see PRO-1 + pōnere, to put; Synonyms:
pose (assumption), prepound (to set
forth), submit (obedience)
In order for companions to join together in a lie, the
man or masculine power must always be the liar, yet
companionship must be built on much deeper and extreme
measures often not considered.
~provost-
(mutable: nōmen,
nōmin)
hood; a label associated with
prestige, honor, or high rank established universally over
others; a high ranking official of both school and church;
keeper of a prison; chief magistrate of certain Scottish
cities; Middle English, from Old English profost and
Old French provost, both from Medieval Latin prōpostus,
alteration of Latin praepositus, person placed over
others, superintendent, from past participle of
praepōnere, to place over : prae-, pre- + pōnere,
to put
Most often, this is something that
preys on others in concept of the Sanhedrin allowance for
cheese in the head. This may be why it serves as a label and
also distraction. See root kwo-
expedition* This very
expedition for some is just a dumb chase for trolls and
their illusion of purpose in life.
~puisne1-
(mutable adjective: to
add
to : ad-, ad- + iacere,
to throw) one plus two; an instigation of
inner purpose whereby measurement is established (lower
rank; associated judge) Old French puisne : puis,
afterward (ultimately from Latin post; see apo-)
+ ne, born (from Latin nātus,
past participle of nāscī, to be born, see genæ-
Instead of realizing that our
children have higher ranks than we do, we use this power as
control, or puissance, which should make you puke at the
nonsense of its use. One may now sense the third man
creeping into the picture, and that of concern for not only
the relationships, but in all of life as expressed, and
overflowing as one plus two without consideration for two
plus one, which is basically a perfect system if known
whereby population is the first lesson.
~reposit-
(transitive verbum; word, word) to put away; store,
Latin repōnere,
reposit-, re-, re- (see [re-
reredos) + pōnere, to place
This is not the republic, rather the
one placed upon it. The second ers has a
Pokonry, (rē- hexose*), which represents
the sugar that comes from the high tower which leads
straight to rēd- high treason*.
~suppose-
(module verbum, word, word) (transitives) a scenario
whereby argument has predominance and the
instigation of believing whether sound or not:
suppose the universe turns into a banana; suppose god
is just a dog; (metropic disorder); a consideration for
probability without studying the facts oneself: I suppose
it will rain; I suppose the wind will blow;
implication of antecedent conditioning expressed in
supposition, or as backwards; presuppose:
"Patience must suppose pain." (Samuel Johnson -
AHD); open consideration as suggestibility: suppose you
live forever; (intransitives) imagination
conjectured: global warming was put forth supposedly on
conclusive grounds; Middle English supposen, from
Old French supposer, alteration (influenced by
poser, to put, place, see POSE1: assumption)
of Medieval Latin suppōnere,
from Latin, to put under : sub-, sub- + pōnere, to
place A sense of the power of
satire should come to mind for pathological study. People
laugh at the truth when it is delivered possibly and likely
without realizing it is the truth. This would seem to be the
case, or it is also possible that many people are more awake
than our exposure allows us to percept?
~transpose-
(module verbum, word, word) (transitives) to
reverse or transfer the order or place of; interchange; to
put into a different place or order: transpose the words
of a sentence; reverse; Mathematics: to
move (a term) from one side of an algebraic equation to the
other side, reversing its sign to maintain equality;
Music: to write or perform (a composition) in a key
other than the original or given key; to render into another
language; to alter its form or nature; (intransitives)
to write or perform music in a different key; to admit of
being transposed;
(mutable: nōmen,
nōmin)
the matrix formed by interchanging the rows and columns of a
given matrix; Middle English transposen, to
transform, from Old French transposer, alteration
(influenced by poser, to put, place, see POSE1:
assumption) of Latin trānspōnere,
to transfer : trāns-, trans- + pōnere, to
place Instead of educating our
children with truth, we brain wash them using this valuable
concept in a twisted and toyish way, and a seemingly direct
attack to kill and destroy their grounding elements with a
sickening allure of plastic. So the trolls are seen living
under the bridge, while the leprechaun is a lying fool.
References for leprechaun:
kwrep-
marble venus (58)
; legwh-
fantail (60); |
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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