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Adam and Eve were the Model-T of Modern Humans, with a factory-installed human language program.
Eden was not a gated retirement community. Eve, and her prototype Adam were supposed to "work" and "guard" the grounds of their garden apartment. These two words, in the original language of their lease, were עבד ABD and שמר SMR , sources of ROBOT and SAMURAI (royal guardsmen of Japan).
One of the entries:
ROBOT [E]BHeD Ayin-Bhet-Dalet EH-bhed_______עבד________[R added to BH-D à RBT] ROOTS: The badly-guessed Indo-European “root” of ROBOT is orbh (to put asunder). These RB or RP roots are taken up at “ORPHAN.”
Robota in Czech means work, and is the immediate source of ROBOT. German Arbeit is also an RBT word meaning "work."
There were no ROBOTS in the Bible; servants did all the Arbeit or עבודה [A]BHOADaH (work).
The German retains the A from the ע Ayin (the soft, Germanic Ayin, naturally) of עבד [E]BHeD (servant -- Genesis 24:18. עבדות [A]BHDOOT, servitude, is the term for the slavery in Egypt.
With Arbeit an R was added after theע Ayin of עבד Ayin-Bhet-Dalet. The דDalet/D shifted dentals to T. As happens to nonhistoric Ms and Ns (nasalizations), the added letter stayed, and the original first letter dropped away. While nowhere as common as nasalizations, liquids L and R can spill into and out of roots like water, see the examples below.
There is a ו Vav in עבודה ABHOADaH, work (Leviticus 23:7), which may have shifted from V,W to R. This is an alternative to accepting liquidization (added Ls and Rs).
BRANCHES: The consistency of RBT "work" words in Germanic and Slavic is almost ROBOTIC. Like the German (and Yiddish) Arbeit is Danish arbejde, Norwegian arbeid and Swedish arbete (notice the retention of the end-Dalet).
Along with the Russian form of עבד[A]BHoaD ( to work) with the extra R, there are exact duplicates of Работа rabota in several Slavic langues. In Eastern Europe the word can be traced back to Old Church Slavonic rabotya (servitude, even closer to עבד [A]BHoaD).
Beyond the region are variants like Albanian robtis (to work hard) and Lithuanian darbas (with the Dalet/dental moving to the front in an M321 metathesis or reversal of עבד [A]BHoaD. Irish "work," obair, allows one to hear a ROBOT in reverse, but it has dropped any end-dental.
Latin labor, toil (whence COLLABORATE, ELABORATE and LABOR), along with Italian lavoro (work) suggest a liquid-bilabial "work" word with no end-dental that is unrelated to עבד [A]BHoaD.
That Edenic etymon could be a reversed, shifted פעל Pa'[A]hL (do, make, act -- see "FACULTY"). Latin work, opus, is close to our ע-ב-ד Ayin-Bhet-Dalet.
Some Slavic languages did not think ע-ב-ד Ayin-Bhet-Dalet at all. Polish praca and Czech prace (work) appear to be from פלח PaLaK[H] (to labor—Daniel 3:18). This is a mere liquid shift away.
The AHD's IE "root" for PRACTICE (PRACTICAL, PRAGMATIC and PRAXIX) is prak (to make, do). This meaning points to פעל Pa'GHahL (do, make, act), with an M132 and a liquid shift.
The ongoing diversification of language begun at Babel did not have descendant offshoots of a proto-language all choose close variations like robots. More than mere migration issues are involved. An innate Edenic language program allows a breakaway clan to think of a different way to say things according to their cultural slant. Other varieties of "work" words are seen at "AMERICA" and "FACILTY."
The third definition of ARBITRARY is “tyrannical, despotic.” This has nothing to do with arbitration. This RBT word may be echoing ע-ב-ד Ayin-Bhet-Dalet slavery, and not AHD’s given "root" of "pulling asunder." Such a "root" may be an M231 of טרף DTeRePH (ripping apart) -- see "TROPHY."
Examples of added Liquids (R, L) besides עבד [E]BHeD to aRbeit (work in German) include: CHARM < חם K[H]ahM, warmth (see "AMITY"), חמד K[H][eMeD, delight; חמוד K[H]aMOOD, charming; COARSE )rough, harsh, … no IE "root", "of unknown origin." If an unhistoric R was added, it is a perfect קשה QaSHeH (hard). [KASHA] ONSLAUGHT or SLAUGHTER from שחט SHaK[H]aDT (to slaughter – Genesis 37:31); ORDER from עדר [A]DahR (see “ORDER”); SLIVER from שבר SHe(V)eR (a sliver or splinter – see “SHIVER”) SLOUCH fromשוח SOOaK[H] (to sink, bow – see “SAG”). German SpRech, speech ; Old English "speech" words have no R. [SPEECH]
Added R’s are not common in Indo-European, but consider the chances of Arbeit and ע-ב-ד Ayin-Bhet-Dalet meaning “work” by sheer coincidence. When considering odds one has to consider what percentage of a total vocabulary can mean the same thing. At the “CAP” and "CALM" entries are more examples of both added Ls and Rs. See “OBEDIENCE.” New ed. of THE ORIGIN OF SPEECHES http://post.ly/1ow4T lightcatcherbooks amazon.comArchived posts, Edenics searches + web games: http://www.edenics.net/ Edenics DVDs. Edenic (Biblical Hebrew) as the original, pre-Babel human language program see our many resources at http://www.edenics.org/ incl. videos in English, Spn., Fr. or Ger. youtube: http://www.youtube.com/watch? v=glWG3coAtEg |
Tuesday, June 28, 2011
The ROBOTS of EDEN
Friday, June 24, 2011
There Is No European Root for R E L I G I O N
| RELIGIOUS RiGeeYLOOS Resh-Gimel-Lamed-Vav-Sahf Rig-GEE-loose ____ רגלות [RGL à RLG] ROOTS: Fittingly, there is no Indo-European root for RELIGION.
Dictionaries perform the usual alchemy on Latin, whose religio means scrupulous piety and conscientiousness (not spiritual transcendence).
Religio is thought to come from religare, to bind back – re plus ligare, to bind. This alleged “binding” is never tied to the many given definitions of faith.
Meanwhile, one can go to a gambling bar or brothel RELIGIOUSLY – that is, with REGULARITY. Piety, rather than belief, is all about scrupulous attention to ritual. The word RELIGION is all about REGULARITY, not belief or faith.
רגיל RaGeeYL (see the “REGULAR” entry) means regular; there is a common M132 metathesis of the letters due to the cosmic scrambling at Shinar (Babel). RELIGION was so hard to trace because its Biblical origin was scrambled from Resh-Gimel-Lamed, RGL, to RLG. Usage also confuses the REGULARITY of religious ritual with heartfelt faith.
The Post Biblical Hebrew רגלות RiGeeYLOOS or RiGeeYLooT means “wont” or “habit,” one’s REGULAR routine. The challenge of organized RELIGION is to not let rote rituals become routine for the REGULAR, jaded spiritually-challenged masses.
The Edenic, Biblical origin of the Modern Hebrew term is רגל ReGeL (leg, foot), moving rhythmically from steps to occasions – as in the plural רגלים RiGaLeeYM. These holidays were recurring, REGULAR, and were pilgrimage festivals to LEG it to Jerusalem.
In Numbers 23, the evil prophet Balaam’s leg or רגל ReGeL gets crushed in verse 25. Balaam then hears his she-donkey (who makes an ass of him) complain that she was beaten three times (רגלים RiGaLeeYM – verse 28). The word play is typically lost in translation.
Besides legging it religiously to the Temple in Jerusalem, there are REGULATIONS to attend to.
In רגלות RiGeeYLOOS the -ות Vav-Sahf or Tahf suffix is the equivalent and source of the English suffix –IOUS.
BRANCHES: English has over a dozen words with this RLG root. Most Indo-European languages use the same root.
The Dutch word for religion means “time out for the deity;” Arabic, Turkish and Swahili prefer a term meaning “law;” and the Hebrew equivalent, דתDa'aT, (only late Biblical) infers "knowledge." -------------------------------------------------- Have yourself An Edenic Sabbatical with the YouTube of that name Archived posts, Edenics searches + web games: http://www.edenics.net/ Edenics DVDs. Edenic (Biblical Hebrew) as the original, pre-Babel human language program see our many resources at http://www.edenics.org/ incl. videos in English, Spn., Fr. or Ger. youtube: http://www.youtube.com/watch? v=glWG3coAtEg |
Wednesday, June 22, 2011
CHERISH is the word
| C(H)ER(ISH) YeeQaiR Yod-Koof-Resh (YE)-CARE__________יקר__________[(Y)KR] ROOTS: CHERISH is the word we use to describe holding something dear or valuing something highly. Old French cher and Latin car(us) mean "dear."
The #3 definition of CARE, a liking or regard, is disregarded as it is believed that CARE derives from IE gar (to cry out).
Love cries out for a sensible KR etymon. יקיר YaQeeYR is the dear and precious of “beloved” (Ben-Yehuda). In Jeremiah 31:20 "Ephraim is a dear son." יקר YaQaR is dear, prized or valued.
Like יקר YeeQaR, הוקיר HOAQeeYR is to honor. ק-ר Koof-Resh is clearly the core root. Updated translations of Isaiah 43:4 will replace "honored" with CHERISHED: "Because you are precious to Me, and honored, and I love you."
A classic Bible concordance translates יקר YaQaR with Latin carus .
The built-in opposite of קרKoof-Resh cherishing and costliness, is the קל Koof-Lamed (liquid shift) in קלה QaLaH (esteemed lightly – Deuteronomy 27:16) and the reduplicated קלקל QiLoaQaiL (“mean, worthless”—Harkavy – Numbers 21:5). More ק-ל-ל Koof-Lamed below, and at “ACCELERATE.”
BRANCHES: Official cognates of CHERISH include CARESS and CHARITY.
Some of the world’s “love” words using The Koof-Resh root include Swedish karlek and Norwegian kjaerlighet. Finnish reverses to rakkaus. In Spanish there is: caro , dear; querencia (affection) ; querer (to love or want) and querido (dear, loved).
More affection at entries like “AMITY” and “LOVE.” Antonyms of the K-R Hebrew root include (KR à RK) רקהRaQaH (good for nothing), (KR à KL), קל QahL (unimportant) and הקלה HeeQLaH (to treat with contempt).
HECKLE (to taunt a speaker) might better be linked to this last Hebrew term than to a Middle Dutch word for cleaning and dressing flax, etc.
“Dear” can infer something expensive, so “costly” is a guttural-liquid like יקר YaQar in Arabic ghali, Finnish kallis, Modern Greek akrivon and Swahili ghali. One has to ignore the first letter, and to reverse the words, to see י-ק-ר Yod-Koof-Resh in (nasalized) Indonesian harganja and Russian daragoy.
Reversing רע RayGHah (friend רק RaQ (only) and רחם RaK[H](aM) (to love) recall KR words that are near [ קרוב QaROABH] and dear [ קרב QaRa(BH), to befriend].
One would expect to find יקר YaQaR ("dear" as expensive) in words meaning “costly.” In Modern Greek akrivon’ includes a “von” suffix, while in Arabic and Swahili ghali ק-ר Koof-Resh has shifted gutturals and liquids.
In Japanese there is kirai na (beautiful) and kirei na (pretty, lovely, clean). The Japanese word that uses the Yod, Koof and Resh of יקר YaQaR is the M312 with a ר Resh-to-W shift: kawaii (dear, lovely).
The first, guttural-liquid element of CALISTHENICS is likely from יקר YaQaR, dear. Theר Resh has shifted liquids to L, and the sense of preciousness has semantically shifted to attraction and beauty, as heard in French cher (dear). For the second element, see “CALISTHENICS.”
שם Shem is name; יפהYaPheH is beauty. What means “prestige” to a (reputation-obsessed ) Semite, י-ק-ר Yod-Koof-Resh, would become mere “beauty” for the children of Yafet יפת or Jafet, the Europeans. Theirs is an aesthetic culture, where “beauty is truth” (John Keats).
Keeping in mind that בBhet, י Yod andח Het are "weak" letters, יקר YaQahR (dear) is akin to קרב QaRoaBH (close, related).
ק-ר Koof-Resh is also featured in the opposite of this near and dear intimacy: קר QaR is cool (emotional too), and (reversing) רחקRa[K]HoaQ is distant.
These were inspired by German abkehr (estrangement). See “COST” and “CARE.” --------------------------- ... an entry in the E-Word CD Dictionary at Lightcatcher (below). This should have been another musical slideshow. I think you know what song we'd choose .New ed. of THE ORIGIN OF SPEECHES http://post.ly/1ow4T lightcatcherbooks amazon.com Archived posts, Edenics searches + web games: http://www.edenics.net/ Edenics DVDs. Edenic (Biblical Hebrew) as the original, pre-Babel human language program see our many resources at http://www.edenics.org/ incl. videos in English, Spn., Fr. or Ger. youtube: http://www.youtube.com/watch? v=glWG3coAtEg |
Sunday, June 19, 2011
An Edenic FATHER'S DAY
| An Edenics FATHER'S DAY
Are you discovering for the first time that El Papa, the Pope, and that beloved Dude we call DAD are from words for father (PAPA) and lover in the language of the Bible?
Well, Father's Day is a good time to unmask our true patriarchs.
Our many forms of double-dental (tooth-made) DADDY words are from ד-ד Dalet-Dalet in the "DAD" entry.
and vowel-bilabial (lip-made) or bilabial-vowel PA words are from א-ב Aleph-Bhet words in the "ABBOT" entry in The E-Word CD Dictionary (over 1000 pages, LightcatcherBooks.com).
First, a global tribute to PA, PAPA, POP, POPPA or PAPPY from אב AhB, Aleph-Bhet, father, teacher, originator, vivifier.
The American Heritage Dictionary has some chutzpah (nerve) to call "papa" "a linguistic near-universal" and "a child's word for 'father' ", but then to go on and list it as an "Indo-European root" along with their other fractionally useful fictions.
Before crossing ABBEY Road, know that Greek abbas, the title ABBOT (father superior of a monastery) is immediately from Aramaic אבא AhBAh, father. Abbas is the informal "daddy" to Arabic abu (father). You'll hear אבא AhBAh, daddy, called out on any Israeli street.
Arabic and even Aramaic are post-Babel versions of the grandpappy of 'em all: the Proto-Earth we call Edenic... whose antiquity and meaning is established in the Hebrew Bible, not a few archeological artifacts debated by the "experts."
Edenics is about Ultimate, not Immediate sources.
Latin has used papa for the POPE, and papas for an educator. The Ixil tribe of Guatemala call father pap. Another אב ABH shifted to PA is Sinhala (Sri Lanka) pi-yaah (dad). From the Romans come English words like ATAVISM, as avus means grandfather or ancestor in Latin. Bpoo is the grandfather term in Thailand.
A brief sampling of "fathers" around the globe includes: ab (Tsimshian, B.C., Canada), apa (Colorado, Equador; Hungarian), ba , baba and fu (Chinese), baba (Persian, Swahili), babe (Kurdish), babbo (Italian), baba (Javanese, Turkish, Taino and Swahili), bap (Hindi), bapa (Bahasa Malaysia), bo (Vietnamese) pa (Vietnamese), papa (German; Luyia, E. Africa), papan (Algonquian), papaz (Turkish), paw (Thai) and ubaba (Zulu).
Fu in Bilau (Papua, New Guinea) means “origin,” reversing our vowel-bilabial etymon. Chinese fu is a husband, and term of respect for an elderly man. F-U is much like PA.
Words like FATHER, Dutch vader, Farsi (Iran) pedar, German vater and Latin pater all have a dental-liquid T-R suffix that is found in Old Iranian. Its meaning is uncertain, but it is found in family names (mother, brother, sister, daughter). The suffix disguises the usual MA and PA elements, or the reversal of אב A(V), papa.
Second, DAD and DaDDY words from דוד DOAD, Dalet-Vav-Dalet, (uncle, any beloved male relative), דודי DOADeeY is "my beloved in Songs 1:8, 9, 10, and the related “lover” term is ידיד YiDeeYD.
Japanese, otto, means husband. In Igbo (Nigeria) the address for an older male family member is dádá.
Global DADS include:
Aroana (Bolivian Amazon) tadi, Aztec tahtil, ta, Basque aita (father) and aitatxo (dad) and aitaita (grandfather), Czech, Irish and Latin daid, German Vati, Greek tata, Inca tayta, Inuit ataatak, Hungarian atya, Latvian tetis, Lithuanian tete, Nahuatl tatli, Polish tatus, Quechua tayta, Rumanian tata, Russian dyadya and otets отец, Sanskrit tatah, Sumerian ada, Tagalog tatay, Turkish ata , Yiddish tate, Welsh tad .
The Japanese word for "father," chichi, seems not to fit. But it is from the older titi. Perhaps the strangest, most stretched-out double-dental word for DADDY is Sinhala (Sri Lanka) thaahth-thaaah. . Among native North American DADDIES there is: Algonquin tatag, Biloxi, adi, Cherokee udoda, Hidatsa tatis, Hopi taata, Kenora taitas,Micmac tatat, Minetare tanta, Navaho ta, Omaha dada and Otchipwe dede.
A double dental for a beloved male relative who is neither one’s father or uncle is Sanskrit dada (brother).
----------------------------------------------------- In Star Wars Darth Vader croaks, "Luke, I am your father." Did you first discover today that vader is Dutch "father?"
May every day bring you discoveries of your true ancestors. [Photo credit: ranhar2 :Flicker] New ed. of THE ORIGIN OF SPEECHES http://post.ly/1ow4T lightcatcherbooks amazon.com Edenics DVDs. Edenic (Biblical Hebrew) as the original, pre-Babel human language program see our many resources at http://www.edenics.org/ incl. videos in English, Spn., Fr. or Ger. youtube: http://www.youtube.com/watch? v=glWG3coAtEg |
Friday, June 17, 2011
You Order CURD, and They Serve You CRUD !
| Little Miss Muffit was eating CURDS and whey. What is the correct way to CURD ? The new entry: CURD QaLOODT Koof-Lamed-Vav-Tet cull-LOOT____ קלוט ____[KL-DT à KRD] ROOTS: CURD, like bean curd, is a cheese-like dish with coagulated milk treated with rennet or an acid. Coagulation, hardening is the self-evident meaning of the root. The close-minded scholars who only want an Indo-European "root," concoct one called greut (to compress, push). They feel that Old English crudan (to press, hasten) and CROWD must be linked to CURD simply because they sound alike. There are two Edenic etymons (source words) with better sound and sense. 1) קלוט QaLOODT means closed up. In Leviticus 22:23 it is rendered "contracted." The קלט QaLaDT contracting of water when COLD (frozen) is similar to the CLOTTING of a wound. See "CLOT." 2) GeLeD גלד GeLeD is a similar guttural-liquid-dental. Freezing water in a backyard bucket will also CLOT, or grow a membrane of ice, or a גלד GeLeD (outer skin). R and L are interchangeable liquids. Just ask any Asian while enjoying a bowl of fLied Lice גלד GeLeD in Job 16:15 is translated "sore" (University of Chicago); the verb is defined as "growing skin over a wound." Having a membrane congeal, as in the CLOTTING of blood, is like the chemical CURDLING of CURDS and the freezing of גלידה GleeYDaH (ice cream -- Modern Hebrew). See "COLD." קרש QaRahSH means clot, coagulate and congeal, but an end-dental gets top billing here. For the guttural-liquid (as in CURD) ק-ר Koof-Resh sub-root of "hardness," see entries like "COOL," "CRYOGENESIS" and "UNICORN."
BRANCHES: Besides CROWD, the blood-CURDLING ineptness (and/or racism) of our reference authorities would have CRUD a cognate of CURD. Recognizable Western European CURD words include Catalan: quallada, French: caillé, Irish gruth, Italian: cagliata, Latin and Norwegian: curd, and Welsh ceuled. Maybe German Quark (curd) reflects Edenic K-R hardness. Finnish is not Indo-European, and their CURD word, rahka, may be reversing that ק-ר Koof-Resh .
CURD words in Azerbaijani, Croatian and Ukrainian are S-R words from the Edenic food culture term usually found with dough. See שאור S'OWR (fermentation) at "SOUR." CLABBER, from Irish clabar, means sour or curdled חלב K[H]aLaBH (milk). For "milk" words, see the Milky Way at "GALAXY." ---------------- The Kurds ? Nah. They are not into hardened milk, like those Jews for Cheeses.Tonight is the Sabbath, so listen to Kinneret's KiNoR (harp, in her case guzheng) here at Posterous or searching An Edenic Sabbatical at YouTube.New ed. of THE ORIGIN OF SPEECHES http://post.ly/1ow4T lightcatcherbooks amazon.com Archived posts, Edenics searches + web games: http://www.edenics.net/ Edenics DVDs. Edenic (Biblical Hebrew) as the original, pre-Babel human language program see our many resources at http://www.edenics.org/ incl. videos in English, Spn., Fr. or Ger. youtube: http://www.youtube.com/watch? v=glWG3coAtEg |
Wednesday, June 15, 2011
a T A L L Tale from Babel
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