eeeaaaaKKKK ! .... .... is anyone else is XPeriencing En-cipher`cee'ing these !Be!Waverhial patternS in Individuals and Situations and Things ?.... Super Dee Dooper WOWzers ! ... On my numbers, my nig* .... if this is supposed to be some what Y'all Said it Was ....
why does it seem to be eleve8ting on a whole -New -Knew -Nu -Noo Direct Tio In. ....
MORE AND MORE (H)Overing on the upward side of the layout mirage or shall we say facade ? ....
A new discovery of these magnitudes everyday ? ....
EveryDay a New Upward BOUND or slash SWING ? ....
When does this stop or shall we say END slash QUIT ? ....
You have to do it urself...
Y'all spoke about bottomless pits .... what about botany, agriculture and gardenin'?
ish IS on poles ....
opposed is supposed.
tellurian (adj.) "pertaining to the earth," 1846, from Latin tellus (genitive telluris) "earth," from PIE root *tel- "ground, floor" (cf. Lithuanian telinat "spread out, flat," Sanskrit talam "plain, sole of the foot," Old Church Slavonic tilo "floor," Greek telia "dice board," Old Irish talam "earth," Old Norse þilja "plank"). The chemical telluride is attested from 1849.
ON and On
OH my my my
WHOA
and all that.....
AND THEN Stumbled upon <~~~~not at that site, either)
Part 7
Surah/t 6. Al-An’am (The Cattle) 32. And the life of this world is nothing but play and amusement. But far better is the house in the Hereafter for those who are .... (the pious and righteous persons) ....Will you not then understand?
Surah/t 6. Al-An’am (The Cattle) 32. And the life of this world is nothing but play and amusement. But far better is the house in the Hereafter for those who are .... (the pious and righteous persons) ....Will you not then understand?
Issachar Look up Issachar at Dictionary.com son of Jacob by Leah (Old Testament), name of a biblical tribe of Israel, from Greek issakhar, from Hebrew Yissakhar, probably [Klein] from yesh sakhar "there is a reward" (cf. Gen. xxx:18).
O !
sugar (n.) Look up sugar at Dictionary.com late 13c., sugre, from Old French sucre "sugar" (12c.), from Medieval Latin succarum, from Arabic sukkar, from Persian shakar, from Sanskrit sharkara "ground or candied sugar," originally "grit, gravel" (cognate with Greek kroke "pebble"). The Arabic word also was borrowed in Italian (zucchero), Spanish (azucar), and German (Old High German zucura, German Zucker), and its forms are represented in most European languages (cf. Serb. cukar, Polish cukier, Russian sakhar). Its Old World home was India (Alexander the Great's companions marveled at the "honey without bees") and it remained exotic in Europe until the Arabs began to cultivate it in Sicily and Spain; not until after the Crusades did it begin to rival honey as the West's sweetener. The Spaniards in the West Indies began raising sugar cane in 1506; first grown in Cuba 1523; first cultivated in Brazil 1532. The -g- in the English form cannot be accounted for. The pronunciation shift from s- to sh- is probably from the initial long vowel sound syu- (as in sure). Slang "euphemistic substitute for an imprecation" [OED] is attested from 1891. As a term of endearment, first recorded 1930. Sugar maple is from 1753. Sugar loaf was originally a moulded conical mass of refined sugar (early 15c.); they're now obsolete, but sense extended 17c. to hills, hats, etc. of that shape.
&
My GMa taught me how to build/create a So-called jacob's ladder. I was like, "GMa this don't look nothing like no ladder!" she was like, "yes, it is, and proceeded to show me the stepping upward ....LMAO! .... And she taught me how to pull/TAKE it apart/aloose. It's No-thing but a 360'n. What?! .... I'll shaow y'all one day soon... ("#sing ....soon and very soon we are going to see the king, soon and very soon we are going to see the king, soon and very soon we are going to see the king ... hallelujah! hallelujah! we're going to cee the king !). ahahahahahah lols
Jacob Look up Jacob at Dictionary.com masc. proper name, name of Old Testament patriarch, son of Isaac and Rebecca and father of the founders of the twelve tribes, from Late Latin Iacobus, from Greek Iakobos, from Hebrew Ya'aqobh, lit. "one that takes by the heel" (Gen. xxviii:12), a derivative of 'aqebh "heel." The most popular name for boys born in the U.S. from 1999 through 2008. Jacob's ladder, in various transferred uses from 1733, is from Gen. xxviii:12. Jacobin Look up Jacobin at Dictionary.com early 14c., of the order of Dominican friars whose order built its first convent near the church of Saint-Jacques in Paris, from Old French Jacobin (13c.) "Dominican friar," also, in the Middle East, "a Copt;" see Jacob. The Revolutionary extremists took up quarters there October 1789. Used generically of radicals and allegedly radical reformers since 1793. Related: Jacobinism. Asher Look up Asher at Dictionary.com masc. proper name, biblical son of Jacob (also the name of a tribe descended from him), from Hebrew, lit. "happy." Baqubah Look up Baqubah at Dictionary.com city in Iraq, from Arabic baya 'kuba "Jacob's house." Simeon Look up Simeon at Dictionary.com masc. proper name, Biblical second son of Jacob and Leah; also a tribe of Israel; see Simon. Daniel Look up Daniel at Dictionary.com proper name, Hebrew, lit. "God is my judge;" related to Dan, lit. "he who judges," the tribe descended from Jacob's son of that name in Old Testament. Consistently in the top 15 names for boys born in the U.S. from 1972 through 2008. Hutterite Look up Hutterite at Dictionary.com 1640s, in reference to Moravian Anabaptist sect established by Jacob Hutter (d.1536) + -ite (1). millionaire (n.) Look up millionaire at Dictionary.com 1821, from French millionnaire (1762); see million. The first in America is said to have been John Jacob Astor (1763-1848). Judah Look up Judah at Dictionary.com masc. proper name, biblical son of Jacob by Leah, also the name of a tribe of Israel, from Hebrew Yehudah, from stem of y-d-h, lit. "praised." Levi Look up Levi at Dictionary.com masc. proper name, biblical son of Jacob by Leah, from Hebrew lewi, lit. "joining, pledging, attached," from stem of lawah "he joined." Amish (adj.) Look up Amish at Dictionary.com 1844, American English, from the name of Jacob Amman, 17c. Swiss Mennonite preacher who founded the sect. Originally spelled Omish, which reflects the pronunciation in Pennsylvania German dialect. As a noun, by 1884. Dinah Look up Dinah at Dictionary.com fem. proper name, in the Old Testament, Jacob's daughter by Leah, from Hebrew Dinah, lit. "judgment," from din "to judge." Jake Look up Jake at Dictionary.com colloquial or familiar abbreviation of the masc. proper name Jacob (q.v.). As the typical name of a rustic lout, from 1854. (Jakey still is the typical name for "an Amishman" among the non-Amish of Pennsylvania Dutch country). Slang meaning "excellent, fine" is from 1914, American English, of unknown origin. Issachar Look up Issachar at Dictionary.com son of Jacob by Leah (Old Testament), name of a biblical tribe of Israel, from Greek issakhar, from Hebrew Yissakhar, probably [Klein] from yesh sakhar "there is a reward" (cf. Gen. xxx:18). Zebulon Look up Zebulon at Dictionary.com masc. proper name, Biblical son of Jacob by Leah, from Hebrew Zebhulun, from zebhul "a dwelling" + diminutive suffix -on (cf. Gen. xxx:20). Rachel Look up Rachel at Dictionary.com fem. proper name, biblical daughter of Laban, wife of Jacob, from Late Latin, from Greek Hrakhel, from Hebrew Rahel, lit. "ewe" (cf. Arabic rahil, Aramaic rahla). psycho-drama (n.) Look up psycho-drama at Dictionary.com 1937 (in writing of U.S. psychiatrist Jacob L. Moreno (1889-1974), from psycho- + drama. Joseph Look up Joseph at Dictionary.com masc. proper name, biblical son of Jacob and Rachel, from Late Latin Joseph, Josephus, from Greek Ioseph, from Hebrew Yoseph (also Yehoseph, cf. Ps. lxxxi:6) "adds, increases," causative of yasaph "he added." Its use in names of clothing and plants often is in reference to his "coat of many colors." Israel Look up Israel at Dictionary.com Old English, "the Jewish people," from Latin Israel, from Greek, from Hebrew yisra'el "he that striveth with God" (Gen. xxxii.28), symbolic proper name conferred on Jacob and extended to his descendants, from sara "he fought, contended" + El "God." As an independent Jewish state in the country formerly called Palestine, it is attested from 1948. lithium (n.) Look up lithium at Dictionary.com silver-white metallic element, 1818, with element ending -ium + lithia, Modern Latin name given by Swedish chemist Jöns Jacob Berzelius (1779-1848) to the earth from which it was extracted, from Greek lithos "stone" (see litho-). So called from its mineral origin and to distinguish it from two previously known alkalis of vegetable origin. Reuben Look up Reuben at Dictionary.com masc. proper name, Old Testament eldest son of Jacob and name of the tribe descended from him, from Greek Rouben, from Hebrew Reubhen, probably lit. "Behold a son," from reu, imper. of ra'ah "he saw" + ben "a son." The reuben sandwich (1956) is "not obviously connected" with the sense in rube [OED]. promethium (n.) Look up promethium at Dictionary.com radioactive element, long one of the "missing elements," 1948, so called by discoverers Jacob Marinsky and Lawrence Glendenin, who detected it in 1945 in the fusion products of uranium while working on the Manhattan Project. From Prometheus, who stole fire from the gods and was punished for it, + element name ending -ium. "The name not only symbolizes the dramatic way in which the element may be produced in quantity as a result of man's harnessing of the energy of nuclear fission, but also warns man of the impending danger of punishment by the vulture of war." [Marinsky and Glendenin] yenta (n.) Look up yenta at Dictionary.com "gossip, busybody," 1923, from Yente Telebende, comic strip gossip in 1920s-30s writing of Yiddish newspaper humorist B. Kovner (pen-name of Jacob Adler) in the "Jewish Daily Forward." It was a common Yiddish fem. proper name, altered from Yentl and said to be ultimately from Italian gentile "kind, gentle," earlier "noble, high-born" (see gentle). ablaut (n.) Look up ablaut at Dictionary.com vowel gradation, 1849, from German Ablaut, lit. "off-sound," coined by J.P. Zweigel in 1568 from ab "off" + Laut "sound, tone," from Old High German hlut (see listen). Popularized by Jacob Grimm. Rebecca Look up Rebecca at Dictionary.com fem. proper name, biblical wife of Isaac, mother of Jacob and Esau, from Late Latin Rebecca, from Greek Rhebekka, from Hebrew Ribhqeh, lit. "connection" (cf. ribhqah "team"), from Semitic base r-b-q "to tie, couple, join" (cf. Arabic rabaqa "he tied fast"). Rebekah, form of the name in Authorized Version, was taken as the name of a society of women (founded 1851 in Indiana, U.S.) as a complement to the Odd Fellows. dissent (v.) Look up dissent at Dictionary.com early 15c., from Latin dissentire "differ in sentiments, disagree, be at odds, contradict, quarrel," from dis- "differently" (see dis-) + sentire "to feel, think" (see sense (n.)). Related: Dissented; dissenting. The noun is 1580s, from the verb. Has there ever been a society which has died of dissent? Several have died of conformity in our lifetime. [Jacob Bronowski "Science and Human Values," 1956] Jack Look up Jack at Dictionary.com masc. proper name, 1218, probably an anglicization of Old French Jacques (which was a diminutive of Latin Jacobus; see Jacob), but in English the name always has been associated with Johan, Jan "John," and some have argued that it is a native formation. Alliterative coupling of Jack and Jill is from 15c. (Ienken and Iulyan). In England, applied familiarly or contemptuously to anybody (especially one of the lower classes) from late 14c. Later used especially of sailors (1650s; Jack-tar is from 1781). In U.S., as a generic name addressed to an unknown stranger, attested from 1889. jacquerie (n.) Look up jacquerie at Dictionary.com 1520s, from Middle French jacquerie "peasants or villeins collectively," from Jacques, the proper name, which is used as Jack is used in English, in the sense of "any common fellow." So, also, "the rising of the northern French peasants against the nobles, 1357-8," from a French usage. Etymologically, Jacques is from Late Latin Iacobus (see Jacob). Benjamin Look up Benjamin at Dictionary.com masc. proper name, in Old Testament, Jacob's youngest son (Gen. xxxv:18), from Hebrew Binyamin, lit. "son of the south," though interpreted in Genesis as "son of the right hand," from ben "son of" + yamin "right hand," also "south" (in an East-oriented culture). Cf. Arabic cognate yaman "right hand, right side, south;" yamana "he was happy," lit. "he turned to the right." The right was regarded as auspicious (see left and dexterity). Slang meaning "money" (by 1999) is from portrait of Benjamin Franklin on U.S. $100 bill. James Look up James at Dictionary.com masc. proper name, name of two of Christ's disciples, late 12c. Middle English vernacular form of Late Latin Jacomus (source of Old French James, Spanish Jaime, Italian Giacomo), altered from Latin Jacobus (see Jacob). The Welsh form was Iago, the Cornish Jago. Fictional British spy James Bond dates from 1953, created by British author Ian Flemming (1908-1964), who reputedly took the name from that of ornithologist James Bond. Prussian Look up Prussian at Dictionary.com 1550s, from Prussia. Prussic acid (1790), is from French acide prussique, so called in reference to the prussian blue pigment, to which it is chemically related. Prussian blue (1724) came to English from French bleu de Prusse, so called for being discovered in Berlin, the Prussian capital. All in all, it seems that Prussian blue was synthesised for the first time around 1706 by the Swiss immigrant Johann Jacob Diesbach in Berlin. [Jens Bartoll and Bärbel Jackisch, "Prussian Blue: A Chronology of the Early Years," "Zeitschrift für Kunsttechnologie und Konservierung" 24, No. 1, 2010] Early German sources refer to it as Preußisches Ultra-Marin and berliner blau. hare (n.) Look up hare at Dictionary.com Old English hara "hare," from West Germanic *hasan- (cf. Old Frisian hasa, Middle Dutch haese, Dutch haas, Old High German haso, German Hase), possibly with a sense of "gray" (cf. Old English hasu, Old High German hasan "gray"), from PIE *kas- "gray" (cf. Latin canus "white, gray, gray-haired"). Perhaps cognate with Sanskrit sasah, Afghan soe, Welsh ceinach "hare." Rabbits burrow in the ground; hares do not. Hare-lip is from 1560s. þou hast a crokyd tunge heldyng wyth hownd and wyth hare. ["Jacob's Well," c.1440] Jew (n.) Look up Jew at Dictionary.com late 12c. (in plural, giwis), from Anglo-French iuw, Old French giu, from Latin Judaeum (nom. Judaeus), from Greek Ioudaios, from Aramaic jehudhai (Hebrew y'hudi) "Jew," from Y'hudah "Judah," lit. "celebrated," name of Jacob's fourth son and of the tribe descended from him. Replaced Old English Iudeas "the Jews." Originally, "Hebrew of the kingdom of Judah." Jews' harp "simple mouth harp" is from 1580s, earlier Jews' trump (1540s); the connection with Jewishness is obscure. Jew-baiting first recorded 1853, in reference to German Judenhetze. In uneducated times, inexplicable ancient artifacts were credited to Jews, based on the biblical chronology of history: e.g. Jews' money (1570s) "Roman coins found in England." In Greece, after Christianity had erased the memory of classical glory, ruins of pagan temples were called "Jews' castles," and in Cornwall, Jews' houses was the name for the remains of ancient tin-smelting works. charm (n.) Look up charm at Dictionary.com c.1300, "incantation, magic charm," from Old French charme (12c.) "magic charm, magic, spell; incantation, song, lamentation," from Latin carmen "song, verse, enchantment, religious formula," from canere "to sing" (see chant (v.)), with dissimilation of -n- to -r- before -m- in intermediate form *canmen (for a similar evolution, see Latin germen "germ," from *genmen). The notion is of chanting or reciting verses of magical power. A yet stronger power than that of herb or stone lies in the spoken word, and all nations use it both for blessing and cursing. But these, to be effective, must be choice, well knit, rhythmic words (verba concepta), must have lilt and tune; hence all that is strong in the speech wielded by priest, physician, magician, is allied to the forms of poetry. [Jacob Grimm, "Teutonic Mythology" (transl. Stallybrass), 1883] Sense of "pleasing quality" first recorded 1590s. Meaning "small trinket fastened to a watch-chain, etc." first recorded 1865. dwarf (n.) Look up dwarf at Dictionary.com Old English dweorh, dweorg (West Saxon), duerg (Mercian), "very short human being," from P.Gmc. *dweraz (cf. Old Frisian dwerch, Old Saxon dwerg, Old High German twerg, German Zwerg, Old Norse dvergr), perhaps from PIE *dhwergwhos "something tiny," but with no established cognates outside Germanic. The mythological sense is 1770, from German (it seems never to have developed independently in English). Whilst in this and other ways the dwarfs do at times have dealings with mankind, yet on the whole they seem to shrink from man; they give the impression of a downtrodden afflicted race, which is on the point of abandoning its ancient home to new and more powerful invaders. There is stamped on their character something shy and something heathenish, which estranges them from intercourse with christians. They chafe at human faithlessness, which no doubt would primarily mean the apostacy from heathenism. In the poems of the Mid. Ages, Laurin is expressly set before us as a heathen. It goes sorely against the dwarfs to see churches built, bell-ringing ... disturbs their ancient privacy; they also hate the clearing of forests, agriculture, new fangled pounding-machinery for ore. ["Teutonic Mythology," Jacob Grimm, transl. Stallybrass, 1883] The shift of the Old English guttural at the end of the word to modern -f is typical (cf. enough, draft). Old English plural dweorgas became Middle English dwarrows, later leveled down to dwarfs. The use of dwarves for the legendary race was popularized by J.R.R. Tolkien. As an adjective, from 1590s.
No comments:
Post a Comment
.