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"It was an ignominious end. . .as a desperate mutiny by a
handful of soldiers blossomed into full-scale revolt" (Angus
Deming - AHD)
 |
 |
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xi |
imix |
|
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Chapter Forty Six:
Vigorosa - Nothing but hound dogs "The sacred stone journey
continues into the sun by
the vigorish eighth
then shortly the Ninth House to meet Dionysus. Pluto tells us there's
nothing but hound dogin' ahead.
|
November 14, 2008: In another weekly chapter, the victory charade continues and launches
off the pad immediately changing into a vicious white wolf, and
possibly the double ort. In the mystery, we run into the nephew
and his wife, who may be nothing but the salt of the sea to the scot and
Lot deal absorbed in our sleeping car of time. And then the wagon ride back and forth
across the metope may seem endless, and further, its manipulation
transferred through the utterances of idiots with a specific agenda, one
of wanton violence and hate, a gross self-feeding I need more power
frenzy.
This last week, it was decided to add (at the last minute)
the location of the Rule of the Five Orders of Impedance, see hemisphere, which can
then be applied
to each side of the brain. This is a simple analogy to the
slippery road ahead in this chapter. Another correlation
along the journey has been made in picking up the second stone,
the sapphire; and another sensing of the third, the
chalcedony; both seeming evident in the derivative
groups below, and a connection between the spirit and
emotions has been made that may have been blocked in time.
This nears the end at Mars, and a sense of the spirit in conflict
"a portioning out," or judgment in the air. We'll be back.
Part one:
Impedance
|
 |
5-hemi-(sand-blind)-semi-sesqui1-sesterce1-et-sēmi-
half?, Old English
sām-, sand-blind, half, Germanic- *sēmi-,
Latin sēmi-, half?, SESQUI-, SESTERCE, Latin-
sēmis, half, Greek- hēmi, hemi-, half,
impedance* (sesqui2
- kwe) (sesterce2
- trei-) |
~hemi-
prefix, half: hemihedral; partially:
hemiparasite, Greek hēmi
Lexeme (polka partner) reference:
-hemia- suffix, variant of -emia
meaning Blood, (versions: -hemia, -aemia, -haemia)
~sand-blind-
having poor vision; partially blind, Middle English, from
Old English sāmblind :
sām, half + blind, see BLIND
~sesqui1- prefix,
one and a half: sesquicentennial, (150 yrs), Latin
sēsqui : sēmis, a
half + que-, and, see root kwe
[ref: -que, (2: sesqui2, ubiquity), even2* (enclitic,
see klei-)]
~sesterce1- a silver
or bronze coin of ancient Rome equivalent to one fourth of a denarius, Latin sēstertius,
a coin worth two and half asses : sēmis, half +
tertius, third, see root trei- [ref:
third, testament, protest, threefold;
mana*]
Root Reference:
-denary- (denarius) tenfold, divided or counted by
tens; decimal, ancient Roman coin worth 25 silver denarii,
from Middle English dēnārius, from dēnī, by
tens, see root dekm-; octogenarian2, tenth,
(tithe), percent, cent, bipod*
~semi-
half: semiparasite, semicircle, semicoma; partially: semicolon,
semiconscious; resembling or having some of the
characteristics of: semi-finished; occurring twice
during: semi-daily The word half, is actually a
member of another root called skel-1, from Old English
healf. This group contains the Old Norse
skil, reason,
discernment, knowledge (< "incisiveness"), and routes to page 923 and
the word ineffable*, which raises a lot of questions. The
skel-2 group routes to the word
infomercial*, so it seems we may another split down the
median plane with these two, and this is the source of the
word half, and obviously this has been expanded on.
The sēmi- root group should also bring
to mind the feeling of the word seem, and this is from
sem-1-.
The root sem-2- is summer. When a
bipod made of wood is stood up on the floor, an analogy can
be formulated on the sēmi-
group by studying the Pokorny choice from page 905, that
being impedance*, symbol Z, and where total opposition is
measured in comparison to its flow. See ohmic
resistance and reactance, X, and
inhibition. This may also be associated with the
Black Flag* del-1- group which has been set aside for the
moment. |
Part two:
Isochromatic
10-schuss-scot-scout2-sheet-shoot-shot-shout-shut-shuttle-wainscot
-et-skeud-
to shoot, chase, throw, Old English scēotan,
shoot, to shoot, Germanic *skeutan, to shoot,
[ Old English sceot, shot, scot,
shooting, a shot, Old High German scuz, schuss,
SCOT, (SCOT AND LOT), Old Norse- skot and Old French
escot, contribution, tax (< "money thrown down");
Middle Dutch- sc(h)ot, wainscot,
crossbar,
wooden partition, sourced *skutaz ], shooting, shot;
Old English- scyttan, shut, to shut, (by
pushing a crossbar), probably from Germanic *skutjan,
Old English- scytel, shuttle, a dart, missile,
Germanic- *skutilaz, [ Old English- scēata,
sheet2, corner of a sail, Old English- scēte,
sheet1,
piece of cloth, sourced Germanic *skautjōn- ]; [
Scandinavian source akin to Old Norse skūta, scout2,
mockery (< "shooting of words"), Old Norse skūta,
shoot, a taunt, both sourced Germanic *skut-,
isochromatic* (scout1 - ous-) |
| ~schuss-
the making of a fast downhill run in skiing; fast straight
downhill run; steep course for skiing, from German, shot,
schuss, from Middle High German schuz, shot, from Old
High German scuz Reference:
-schwa- Linguistics: a mid central
neutral vowel, typically occurring in unstressed syllables,
as the final vowel of English sofa, also called
intermediate vowel; the symbol (æ,
normally a backward e), used to represent an unstressed
neutral vowel, and, in some systems of phonetic
transcription, a stressed mid-central vowel, as in but,
German, from Hebrew šěwā', probably from Syriac
šěwwayyā, equal
And from last chapter:
-anschluss-
a political union, especially one unifying Nazi Germany and
Austria in 1938, Old High German ana) + schliesen,
to close [note: may be
the creation of the hollow vessel known as qab from
Hebrew where the entity becomes the perception of the
"thrill", and may in some ways alter the psyche, washing out
the inner sanctity, and possibly washing out memories as
this is also associated with traveling in some cases.]
~scot-
money assessed or paid, Middle English,
tax, partly from Old
Norse skot and partly from Old French escot,
of Germanic origin, [ref:
scot and lot- tax levied on British families ability to
pay]
Astrology: Scorpius is the constellation on the
Southern Hemisphere near Libra and Sagittarius, containing
the bright red star Antares, also called Scorpion, Latin
scorpius, scorpion, Scorpius. This red star may in some
sense represent the "thrill" feeling of the psychopath, and
that of simulation of riding the sheet to the ground from a
narrowed point. This may eliminate the wife of the nephew,
being the spirit, as told in the story of Lot in the Old
Testament, where she is turned to a pillar of salt, yet she
is also the sea in analogy, and partner with Lot to the
psyche arrangement. It may be that turning away from the
truth is the intention of the fairy tale.
~scout2-
implant, to reject with disdain
or derision; despise; to treat another with derision, scoff,
of Scandinavian origin, see scout1 root
ous-
Yoruba (23)
~sheet-
sheet1: a broad rectangular piece of fabric serving
as a basic article of bedding; a broad, usually thin
rectangular piece of paper, such as metal, glass, or
plywood; a flat or shallow, usually rectangular pan used for
baking; a broad or flat continuous surface or expanse: sheet
of ice; a moving expanse: sheet of flames; newspaper,
especially a tabloid; Geology: a broad or relatively thin
deposit or layer of igneous or sedimentary rock; a large
block of stamps printed by a single impression of a plate
before the individual stamps have been separated; being in
the flow of sheets: sheets of rain, Middle English shete,
cloth, from Old English scēte;
sheet2: a rope or chain attached to one or
both of the lower corners of a sail, serving to move or
extend it; the spaces at either end of an open boat in front
of and behind the seats; to extend in a certain direction;
Middle English shete, from Old English scēat(line),
sheet (line), from scēata,
corner of a sail
~shoot-shot-
implanted uses, Hyperboreans-
ancient Grecian belief of one who lives in a perpetually
warm and sunny land north of the source of the north wind, a
cold fridge*
Both of these words have over 100
definitions provided for their uses. What they actually
represent is the "act of throwing"
which is linked directly
to the devil and the diabolic, which is root gwelæ-
PHI (23)
which is another group marked for the
janitor. Shoot is from Middle English shoten, from Old
English scēotan; shot is from Middle English, from Old
English sceot, scot, so the derivatives tell another story,
and shot2 helps to explain it by describing shot as
iridescent, streaked, or flecked, which is ridiculous. And,
thanks to words like these, life becomes a game of points,
both diabolic, and seemingly intended to recruit others like
themselves similar to a virus that desires more if itself.
~shout-
shout1: an
overwhelming audible expressed in anger; spite;
shout2: an intrinsic
feeling to speak out from inside not necessarily with words,
but with the heart, and to write it down, Middle English
shoute, perhaps from Old
Norse skūta,
a taunt, Synonyms for shout1:
bicker, rant, mock, insult, ridicule,
Synonyms for
shout2:
holler, howl, roar, whoop, yell, (to make a strong
cry)
As with the Hyperborean brothers above, the second shout is
often not considered, and this may be intended to a certain
degree from the prevalent uses of the language interwoven
into the coccon.
~shut-shuttle-
(Psychological); devices used
for closure; weaving carrier from the woof thread back and
forth between the warp thread; shuttlecock (see badminton);
the line of connection between the welded pieces of metal;
refusing to consider; travel between disputing parties;
traveling to space. Shut is from Middle English shutten,
from Old English scyttan; shuttle is from Middle
English shutille, from Old English scytel,
dart. It seemed necessary to merge these two, as it also
seems easy to get to space without ever leaving the ground
according to their definitions. It would be difficult to
discern the difference between closure, and traveling,
almost similar to the second shot, where all of this
so-called movement rings a cash register when activated,
which in society is a form of slavery.
~wainscot-
an application of material, often wood, which serves as a
facing on the walls of rooms that is a different texture
than that above it; waist height paneling of interior walls,
Middle English, from Middle Dutch waghenscot :
perhaps waghen, wagen, wagon (from the quality
of wood used for carriagework); see WAGON + scot,
partition
Wagon is a member of the wegh- root group
which turns out to be navigated to page 1118, and this is
the measurement table, so this group will be highlighted in
an upcoming chapter.
|
Part three: Charade
27-agnomen-anonymous-antonomasia-cognomen-denominate-eponym-euonymus
-heterononymous-homonymous-ignominy-metonymy-metronymic-misnomer-moniker
-nominal-nominate-nomenclator1-noun-onomastic-onomatopoeia1-onym-onymy
-patronymic-praenomen-pseudonym-renoun-synonymous-et-nŏ-men-
name, earlier form *(æ)noæ-mn, zero-grade *(æ)noæ-men,
Old English nama, name, Germanic- *namōn;
Latin- nōmen, renoun, name, reputation; Latin- euōnymus,
euonymus,
a kind of tree growing in Lesbos; Greek- onoma, onym,
onuma, name; Old Irish- ainm, moniker,
name, charade* (nomenclator2
- kele-2-) (onomatopoeia2
- kwei-2-) |
~agnomen-
an additional cognomen given to a Roman citizen, often in
honor of military butchery, Latin : ad-, ad-
(influenced by agnōscere,
to recognize) + nōmen, name, [note:
killing is never victory as defined, it is always the same,
butchery, when it is victory, the soul is already gone]
Warning: Alternate knowledge base; defective substratum (a); elevated esteem;
Agnosia is defined as the loss of the ability to interpret
sensory stimuli, (inhibition), with the agnostic as polka
partner. This should certainly raise questions as to the
power of the marionette being installed.~anonymous-
having an unknown or acknowledged name: anonymous writer;
having an unknown or withheld source or agency: anonymous
conversation, anonymous call; having no distinction, a
loosing of character; synecdoche: anonymous centering
(the general for the specific), from Late Latin anōnymus,
from Greek anōnumos, nameless : an-, without;
see A-1 + onuma, name
We've already been over the whole
and half bit, so synecdoche was added here to get you
thinking. First, the partner to this word is anon, which is
a part of the fantastic root oi-no- which is
the unanimous one, but not one thing, which should add
discussion in comparison to anonymous. Beside this is
anomie which is rooted to nem- which is
the first Deuteronomy along with astronomy. It is also
thought to be socially unstable, however, the group does not
reflect this notion. Beside this is anomalous rooted
to sem-1- which is simplicity, but
it is also the first Hamadryad where the spirit is hammered
into position. This mess rest on page 75 inclusive of roots
at-, then ed- just prior, and
reg- just after, which all need completing.
~antonomasia-
(evision) the substitution of a
title or epithet for an improper
naming: war on terror; a
substitution of personal preference that
does not properly describe the
substituted: Patriots Act,
Latin, from Greek antonomazein, to name instead :
anti-, instead of; see
ANTI- + onomazein, to name
Originally, this was tagged to those who are creative so
that those who are sick can work behind the veil of secrecy
telling us what is what, creating the perpetual void between
them. The opposing force is applied when the creation is
made, as in the anti-being version of the antlion,
the one who can only wait in the sand until its prey wanders
close enough to be eaten.
~cognomen-
family name; a distinguishable title associated with
several generations of breeding; last name; the third
and usually last name of ancient Rome, as Caesar in
Gaius Julius Caesar; a descriptive title applied over
a period of usage; nickname, Latin : co-, co-
+ nōmen, name
Nickname is of the aug- root group from Middle English neke name, from
the phrase an eke name : eke, addition (from
Old English ēaca + name) It
is also that time of year where nicknames are installed
beginning with Halloween, then Thanksgiving, and finally
Christmas as the wand flower is beginning. See root
aug-
apartheid (38)
~denominate-
a process of infinite segregation and division; monetary
units; giving a name to this process;
value; of or relating to a
quantity as a multiple of a unit: number, Latin dēnōmināre,
dēnōmināt- : dē-,
de- + nōmināre, to name, from nōmen, name
It seems religion has become
astrological, as the root nem- is being
accessed again, and you can sense this when the diction
tells you that 12 in 12 pounds is denominate, when
this is clearly a way to confuse you about reality, and
avoid the truth of the numbing.
~eponym-
a person whose name is or is thought to be the source of the
name of something, such as a city, country, or era, for
example, Romulus is an eponym of the word Rome; the naming
of diseases or drugs using people's names, French eponyme,
from Greek epōnumus,
named after : epi-, epi- + onoma, onuma,
name The prefix epi- is
a member of the epi- root and this is the
oblast, or territorial division given to
constituents of the Soviet Union, or those (over, on, at, or
above), and attached to the wal- root which is
about power and rule, and where value is included in
the group. This value ends up being placed into the same
hands over and over down through history, or those with the
most of the existing rule, and quite unfairly so.
~euonymus-
any of the various trees, shrub or vines of the genus
Euonymus, cultivated for their decorative foliage or
fruits, Latin euōnymus, a
kind of tree growing in Lesbos, from Greek euōnumos,
of good name : eu-, eu- + onuma, name
Lesbos was an ancient island of eastern
Greece in the Aegean sea nestled near the northwest coast of
Turkey, an Aeolian settlement noted for its lyric poets,
including Sappho, in the seventh century. The island was
annexed by Greece in 1913. Sappho is considered on of the
greatest poets of antiquity although only fragments of her
romantic lyrics survive. Her polka partner in lex is the
second precious stone in the trail, the sapphire, having no
root, and the closet root is sep- for the word
sapor, which
is a strange quality that is only related to the perception
of taste. The other closest root is gwei- for the
saprobe,
an organism that recycles life. One analogy that immediately
comes to mind is the spiritual and emotional connection
being made, whereas, with scot and Lot, it seems a physical
and intellectual sword blocking this connection.
Revelation
21:19
And the foundations of the wall of the city were garnished
with all manner of precious stones. The first foundation was
jasper; the second, sapphire; the third, a
chalcedony; the fourth, an emerald;
~heterononymous-
being related to, or of the nature of a heteronym; being
different names or terms but having correspondence or
interrelationships, such as Sappho and romance, from Late
Greek heterōnnumos, from Greek, with a
different denominator : Greek
hetero-, hetero- + Greek onoma, name
Here we go again, hetero-, the prefix,
comes from the sem-1- root, and the
hammering together, and here use of declaring value only by
nomination or non-nomination seems rigidly unproductive, as
romance does not denominate love, or visa versa, unless your
a machine, as this root contains words like seem and
anomalous. There will also be anomalies across
languages barriers where meanings are lost from one language
to the other, and the anomalies are related to the
hertero-indigenous assemblies of knowledge.
~homonymous-
having the same name; homonymic; from Latin homōnymus,
from Greek homōnumos : homo-, homo- + onuma,
name
These seem to be dealing
mostly with grammar that designate several different things
at once, and unacceptable when naming species of plants,
where clear designation is required in spelling for a new
species, or one that is identical to a previous genus. Words
such as the word shut,
has many meanings alone in a single lexicon of language, so
the confusion does not always total up to what is actually
noticed on the surface, as this only represents a minute
portion of the maze actually within the homo-sapient mind.
~ignominy-
humiliation for a foolish fire; disgrace; unacceptable
conduct or behavior: "It was an ignominious end. . .as
a desperate mutiny by a handful of soldiers blossomed into
full-scale revolt" (Agnus Deming - AHD), French
ignominie, from Old French, from Latin ignōminia
: i-, in-, not; see IN-1 + nōmen, nōmin,
name, reputation
|
|
~metonymy- a figure of speech in which one word
or phrase is substituted for another with which it is
closely associated such as the words love and peace, Late
Latin metōnymia, from
Greek metōnumia : meta-, meta- + onuma,
name ~metronymic-
of, related to, or derived from the name of one's mother or
material ancestor, Greek mētrōnumikos
: from mētēr, mētr-, mother, see METRO- +
onuma, name [ref: metro-,
root māter-
Rhea (20)]
~misnomer-
a vague classification for error in naming a person, place,
or thing, Middle English misnoumer, from Old French
mesnomer, to misname : mes-, wrongly; see MIS-
+ nommer, to name (from Latin nōmināre,
from nōmen, name)
The prefixed mis- is a member
of the bonanza group mei-1, which according to Julius
Pokorny, may be the fossil*, which is the the faint remnant
of the organism, or the visible outer shell of the fish. It
may be wise to actually see the real fish before classify a
name as wrongly applied.
~moniker-
a personal name or nickname, probably from Shelta munik,
name, possibly alteration of Irish Gaelic ainm, from
Old Irish
Unfortunately, the polka partner to moniker is money, and
this may actually be what the nickname is really attached to
rather than the soul of the person if one exists, as without
the money flow, the monikers associated with today's world
may not even exist.
~nominal-
of, resembling, related to, or a preexisting condition
consisting of a name or names; the assignment of bearing a
name usually where only the name itself has value;
Philosophy: insignificantly small, trifling; Grammar:
of, or related to a noun or word group that functions as a
grouping of nouns, Middle English nominalle, of
nouns, from Latin nōminālis,
of names, from nōmen, nōmin-, name
~nominate-
a preexisting condition by where a person is selected as a
qualified elective; appointment; the designation or
appointment to an honorary position of power, and or
responsibility, Latin nōmināre,
nomināt-, to name, from nōmen, nōmin,
name
~nomenclator1-
one who assigns names, as in scientific classification,
Latin nōmenclātor, a
slave who accompanied his master to tell him the names of
people he met, variant of nōmenculātor : nōmen,
name (see root nŏ-men-) + calātor, servant, crier (from calāre,
to call), see root
kelæ-2-
doggo (25)
updated
-nomenclature- an accepted system of names used in an art
or a science: the nomenclature of alchemy; a
procedure of assigning names to the kinds and groups of
classifications made in a particular art or science;
taxonomic; Latin nōmenclātūra, from
nōmenclātor, nomenclator
~noun- a word that is used to name a person, place,
thing, quality, or action and can function as the subject or
object of a verb, the object of a preposition, or an
appositive, Middle English, name, noun, from Anglo-Norman,
from Latin nōmen,
nōmin
The word noun is surrounded,
first with the noumenon, wrongly classified as the
thing-in-itself, and an attempt to separate the median
plane. The Kant philosophy makes sense where an object, such
as the soul can be demonstrated, but its perception is
rather open. The noumenon is to perceive by
thought, from nous, mind. This leaves the word
noun as the tag to the
thing-in-itself. On the other side, we have
nourish, which is rooted to
(s)nāu-
NaDéné
(23)
which now has been partially updated.
Nourish rest on the word nous, which is also quite
strangely defined, where it is stated that it is the
rational part of the soul, which is mighty arguable, as
the word rational in use is mostly nonsense. One
should consider that reason and knowledge must live
with sense perception, or it would not be possible in
the first place, so trying to separate it at some levels is
completely ridiculous.
~onomastic-
of, or related to, or explaining a name or names, French
onomastique, from Greek onomastikos, from
onomazein, to name, from onoma, name
~onomatopoeia- the formation or use of words such as
buzz or murmur that initiate the sounds
associated with the objects or actions they may refer to,
Late Latin, from Greek onomatopooiia, from
onomatopoios, coiner of names : onoma, onomat-,
name + poiein, to make, see root kwei-2-;
cheetah, poem, evvoia*
Lexeme Reference:
-Onondaga- Native American people formerly inhabiting
the eastern Fingers Lake region of west-central New York,
with present day population in same area, and in southeast
Ontario, original members of the Iroquois confederacy;
Iroquoian language of the Onondaga, Onondaga onó·Ntà'ke,
on the hill, a village name
~onym-
suffix, word; name: acronym, Greek -ōnumon,
neuter of -ōnumos, having a specified kind of name,
from onuma, name
~onymy-
suffix, a set of names; the study of a kind of names:
toponymy, Greek -ōnumia,
from -ōnumos, having a specified kind of name, from
onuma, name
~patronymic-
of, related to, or derived from from the name of one's
father or a paternal ancestor, Late Latin patrōnymicus,
from Greek patrōnymicus, from Greek patrōnumikos,
from patrōnumos, named after one's father : patēr,
patr-, father + onuma, name
~praenomen-
the first name of a citizen of ancient Rome, as Gaius
in Gaias Julius Caesar, Latin praenōmen
: prae-, pre- + nōmen,
name ~pseudonym-
a fictitious name that is assumed; pen name, French
pseudonyme, from Greek pseudōnumon,
neuter of pseudōnumos, falsely named : pseudēs,
false; see PSEUDO- + onuma, name
~renoun-
the quality of being widely honored and acclaimed; fame;
Obsolete: Report, rumor, Middle English renoun, from
Anglo-Norman, from renomer, to make famous : re-,
repeatedly ( from Latin; see RE-) + nomer, to name
(from Latin nōminaāre,
from Latin nōmen,
nōmin-,
name)
-synonymous-
having the same or similar meaning; equivalent in
connotation, Medieval Latin synōnymus,
from Greek sunōnumus : sun-, syn- + onoma,
onuma, name |
Part four: Mars
15-about-auslander1-but-carouse-ersatz1-hubris-hysteresis-hysteron
proteron2
-ort2-outlaw-uitlander1-ursprache-utmost-utter-vigorish-et-ud-
up, out, Old English- ūt, out, utmost,
Old High German- ūz, out, carouse, auslander,
Old Norse- ūt, out outlaw, Middle Dutch-
ute, uut, out, uitlander, Old
English- ūtera, outer, utter1, utter2, Germanic
suffixed (comparative) form *ūt-era-; Old English-
būtan, about, būte, but, outside
(adverb) sourced Germanic compound *bi-ūtana, "at the
outside" (*bi-, by, at, see ambhi-)
all above sourced Germanic *ūt-; Extended form *uds,
[ Old High German- irsezzan, ersatz, to
replace, from ir-, out; Middle Dutch- oor,
ort, out; Germanic *uzdailjam, "a portioning
out," judgment (see dail-); Old High German-
ur-, ursprache, out of, original, sourced Old
High German *uz, *uz-, out ]; Suffixed (comparative)
form *ud-tero-, Greek- husteros, hysteresis, hysteron
proteron, later, second, after, Greek compound hubris,
hubris,
violence, outrage, insolence (bri-, perhaps "heavy,"
"violent"; see gwere-1-), from hu-; Russian- vy-
vigorish, out, Mars* (photo
© NASA) (auslander2
- lendh) (ersatz2
- sed-) (hysteron
proteron1 -
per-1-) (ort1
- ed-) (uitlander2
- lendh-) |
|
~about-
implanted use, vague
approximation: the slaughter of America lasted about 8
years; a reverse position or direction: about-face:
the truth was always in the about-face position; having
no particular direction: they wandered about the land;
in the vicinity: it was about the air; successively
repetitious: Satan often says turn about is fair play;
on all sides: they fought about themselves; an almost
reference: I couldn't remember what it was about; a
processing: I thought about it; possession of an
inept character: it's about our god's war; supposedly
ready to act: a bout was about to twist;
Usage problem: Used with
a negative to indicate strong intentions:
I am not about to concede;
moving here and there: the wind circled about itself;
astir; a claim to evidence: I thought about it;
Middle English, from Old English onbūtan : on, in;
see ON + būtan, outside
The word history for
about will for sure make you want
to puke, as this word's use is a serious problem. Here is
the section from the history that is unacceptable.
"The construction not about to
is often used to express determination: We are not about
to negotiated with terrorists. A majority of the Usage
Panel considers this usage acceptable in speech but not in
formal writing." This is how we hear it today, always
blurted out as nonsense, and the avoidance of getting it in
writing, where it looks like its use is clearly insane. The
vague reference to terrorism is a form of hate that has
manifested in the soul, as if terrorists were actually real,
we would get to see who they are, as their identities would
be validated and plastered all over the bogus media,
and as it stands, the predominant media has made themselves
look like idiots. Some more secret to understanding this
implant may lie with the polka partner
abound which is rooted to
wed-1- snowmen (26)
~auslander1-
a classification of foreigner, German Ausländer, from
Ausland, outland : aus-, out (from Middle High
German ūz, from Old High German; see ud-)
+ Land, land (from Middle High German lant, from Old
High German, see lendh-;
notes: this root is quite strange, as it is
associated with the Landsmäl, where land and
speech are merged, and when anyone else who lives on
earth encounters this, they are considered foreigners, which
does not consider ethics as primary, and the Landsman is the
seeming source of this problem, where men form groups, and
use this power upon others as prey. Julius Pokorny sends us
to page 675, item 3, and this will be marked the fever
tree*
~but-
(preposition usage as primary); partial opposition:
the game was good but we lost; on the contrary:
you may have won but we'll win again; contrary to
expectation: he organized the speech but accomplished
nothing; Usage problem:
Used to indicated an exception: No
one but she saw the prowler; With the exception
that; except that. Used to indicate a dependent clause:
would have resisted but they lacked courage; Used
after a negative or question: There is not one good, but
justice will prevail; If not, unless: Odds are good
but it won't matter; Informal: Than: They had
no sooner arrived but they turned around and left;
Usage problem: Except.
-but adverb- Merely; just; only:
hopes that lasted but a moment;
Used as an intensive: Get out of
here but fast!, Middle English, from Old English
būtan
Contrary to the word
about, the history
for the word but in the AHD is outstanding, and argues for its
use as a unstressed conjunction, almost a schwa effect. A
few of the examples have been removed, and some remain. Used
as a dependent clause prevents the easy exchange with the
word "and", where some of the examples of conjunctions this
is easily changed revealing the inner cloak.
~carouse-
boisterous; drunken merrymaking; a carousal; drink
excessively, regularly; German garaus, all out, drink
up : gar, completely (from Middle High German, from Old High
German garo) + aus, out up (from Middle High
German ūz, from Old High German ūz)
~ersatz1- being an imitation or a substitute, usually an
inferior one; artificial: ersatz Democracy; German,
replacement, from ersetzen, from Old German irsezzan :
ir-,
out, see ud- + sezzan, to set, see
sed-; notes: this root is the soil,
and the chair or saddle, and Sanhedrin,
and where the hybrid* is born.
~hubris-
overbearing pride or presumption:
Fox news, in their hubris reports terrorist are everywhere;
Greek excessive pride, wanton violence
~hysteresis-
the lagging of an effect (or healing) behind its perceived
cause, as when the change in magnetism of a body lags behind
changes in the magnetic field of the body in question, Greek
husterēsis, a shortcoming, from husterein, to
come late, from husteros, late
~hysteron proteron2-
a figure of speech in which the natural or
rational order of its terms is reversed, as in born
and bred or bred and born respectively;
the logical fallacy of assuming as true and using as a
premise a proposition and or unusual conjunctions that are
false and or may never have any value in discourse; Late
Latin, from Greek husteros, latter, later, (see
ud-) + proteron, neuter singular of
proteros, former, see
per-1-
planck's constant (30)
~ort2-
the consideration of left-over food; crumbs; a scrap; bit;
Middle English orte, food left by animals, probably
from Middle Dutch : oor, out; see ud- +
eten, to eat, see root ed-;
notes: this root means
"to bite", to devour, fret, and the Greek odunē,
pain, (< "gnawing care"), the Samoyed, and the white dog,
which navigates to page 287 and the caracara*, a predatory
hawk that eats dead flesh. The
last two definitions have had the root markers rearranged to
better display the navigation inclusive of an evaluation of
who is eating who.
~outlaw-
someone considered against a law whether just or not and
labeled a fugitive (away from) the law:
political outlaws; a
forced exclusion from enforcers; nonconformism; a wild or
vicious person; a moving away from oneself:
illegally they were outlawing the
laws themselves; the act of placing a ban;
prohibit: outlawed life, even the
air; deprived of the rights to liberty and
justice against oppressors; Middle English outlaue,
from Old English ūtlagr, outlawed, banished : ūt,
out, see ud- + lög, law, see legh-;
notes: this root is the lair, the stalg, the litter breed,
and the Latin wagon-lit, which navigates to page 658 and
fallacious*, and also 660, item 2, fanaticism*.
Criminals are made, they are breed into
the system that manifests them. Going against laws that are
crimes themselves does not make one a criminal, instead,
possibly a hero, or heroine. Crimes should be just, so all
killing is actually unacceptable.
~uitlander1-
South African: outlander; foreigner; a native of
Great Britain who resided in either of the
former republics of the Orange
Free State and Transvaal, Afrikaans, from Middle Dutch
utelander, from uteland, foreign land : ute,
out, see ud- + land, land, see root
lendh- see auslander references above
~ursprache-
see protolanguage; German : ur-, original
(from Middle High German, out of, from Old High German; see
ud- + Sprache, language, speech (from
Middle High German sprāche, from Old High German
sprāhha) The ursine,
the marker for Ursa Major and Minor, is polka partner to
ursprache, and rooted to rtko- which is
the artic bear Arthur, the king in the court of hot air*
according to page 875.
~utmost-
being at a situation at the most distant point imaginable;
farthest: the utmost tip of the peninsula; consideration in
height as degree of greatness: your utmost Majesty;
intensity and extremism: endless and repetitious matters
of the utmost pathocracy; a feeling of the greatest
amount: it was the utmost to climb up and down the
ladder, as the next day, my butt was in pain; Middle
English, from Old English ūtmost : ūt, out;
see ud- + -mest, most
~utter-
utter1: to send forth with the voice; articulate; to
pronounce or speak; vent; Law: the placement of
(counterfeit money, for example) into circulation; to
publish (a book, for example); Obsolete: to sell or
delivery (merchandise, for example) to pawn; Middle English
utteren, partly from Middle Low Germans uteren,
(from uter, outer, comparative of ūt, out; see
ud-) and partly alteration (influenced by
utter, outer, see utter2) of Middle
English outen, to disclose (from out, out, see
OUT); utter2: complete,
absolute, entire: utter
nonsense; Middle English, from Old English ūtera,
outer, see ud-
~vigorish-
a charge taken on bets, as by a bookie or gambling
establishment; the rate of this charge to place bets;
interest, especially excessive interest paid to a
moneylender, Yiddish slang, from Russian vyigrysh,
winnings : vy-, out, see
ud- + -igrysh, as in proigrysh,
a loss (from igrat', to play)
The polka partner to
vigorish is the word
vigor, rooted to
weg- mecca (26)
and an key group for study that
contains velocity, vegetable, and watch. The vigilante is
also nearby with the same root, and between them is Giacomo
da Vignola, originally last name Barozzi or Barozlo (1507 -
1573), who is best known for the treatise Rule of the Five
Orders of Architecture (1562) of which are Toscano, Dorico,
Ionico, Corintho, and Composito. The last design is the
creepiest of all where the ionic helix is applied on top of
the Corinthian capital (super gaudy), which may be applied in
analogy to the damage done architecturally to our world in
the psychological senses. William Pain, later picked up on
this and expanded it in the Builder Companion in 1762, see
ost-
gossamer (13)
The Vigorosa is the
feeling you have when you have snuck past the
vigorish spy, and the spirit
keeps moving forward, as the word Vigorosa is rooted from vigor. To see the show,
or just what happened, review
okw- gmt (44)
and the Ok Corral, or the Metope experience, and look for
the vinegarroon crawling on the capitals promoting the sting
with fallaciousness of integrity. |
Part five: Brace
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1-dys-et-dus-
bad, evil; mis- (used as a prefix) Derivative of deu-1.
Greek dus-, dys-, bad, brace* |
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~dys-
prefix, abnormal: dysplasia; impaired:
dysgraphia; difficult: disphonia; bad:
dyslogistic, Latin dys-, bad, from Greek dus-
The polka partner to dys- is
dyscalculia, an impairment of the ability to solve
mathematical problems, and strangely, the condition known as
SIDS, may be related to the fact that the word side
has the first definition related to Mathematics, that
being, a line bounding a plane figure, and I have also
mentioned the hysteresis above. The list of dys- words
totals 30 in the AHD, of which several are rooted.
-dyscrasia- bad blood, root
keræ-; mix, confuse, cook, 582, El Dorardo3*
-dyslexia- learning disorder, root
leg- duma duma (41)
-dysmenorrhea- menstruation, root
mē-2-
Isis (21)
-dyspepsia- supposed indigestion, root pekw:
cook, crusine, concoct, 798, gross*
-dyspnea- can't breath, root pneu-;
sneer, snort, pneumatic, 838, Paris*
-dysprosium- Atomic Element #66, valance 3, root
ei-
the joker (14) deu-1- Deuteronomy, from Greek deuteros, "missing", next,
second, borderline* |
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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