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God wept: 'rami (plural) : A branch; ... The + sign at the end of a unit title means all of the words in that unit have ...Decalcomania (from the Latin de which means down, plus calquer,..

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It's Your Thing Do What You Want To Do!

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Sep 18, 2009, 1:48:45 AM9/18/09
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'O Solomon your exceeding glory fades!'

'Oh, how I wept when David was crowned King; I wept before the
nations.

'David, let thy nations be! '
'Does not a Father forgive They a son, when the son is not Thee who
reigned the King's Love is welcome at the King's Kingdom.
Caution! What is Thy step?
Caution, what step [to] God you preach!
Thy footstool before David and Jonathan be [come] a throne!
if one has a grievance against another; as the Lord has forgiven you,
so must you also do.U Y Z Names that in Hebrew start with a yod are
in English written with an I or J. In regular text the yod is commonly
transliterated with a y. YHWH (Yahweh, Jahweh) YHWH is the
second creation Name of God. God's Name changes from Elohim to YHWH
Elohim in Genesis 2:4 and the reason for this change is examined in
our article on the Chaotic Set Theory. As told by Joel M. Hoffman
Ph.D. in his delightful and riveting book In the Beginning: A Short
History of the Hebrew Language - read our review - the Hebrews were
the first to incorporate vowels in their written text, and by doing
this the previously esoteric art of writing and reading became
available to the masses. The seemingly casual command to 'write'
something on doors or foreheads included the invention of a writing
system that could be learned by everybody. A very big deal, and
resulting in the most powerful tool of data preservation up to this
common age. Hebrew theology is by far the most influential ever, and
this is in part due to the Hebrew invention of vowel notation. This
power (this theology) contrasted others by use of the vowel notation,
using symbols that were already used and until then only represented
consonants: the letters (waw), (yod) and (heh), and to give an
example: the word is either the word dod, meaning beloved (and the
is a vowel), or it is the word dud, meaning jar (and the is again a
vowel), or it is the word dawid, which is the name David (and the is
a consonant).These letters became markers for both the Hebrew identity
and the Hebrew religion, including the various names for God. One of
these names is the famous Tetragrammaton (YHWH) which actually exists
only of vowels, and is utterly exceptional in many ways, including the
fact that it can not be pronounced.The word (El) was the name of the
prominent Canaanite god, whose name was either derived of or became
the common word for god in general. The plural of this word is ; gods.
With the addition of the letter , creating the word , the Hebrews not
only stated essential monotheism (by naming a single God after the
plural word "gods") but also marked their God as theirs: Elohim is the
singular pantheon of the vowel-people.Something similar occured when
the name of patriarch Abram () was expanded with the heh into
Abraham , and the name of matriarch Sarai () was expanded with the heh
to Sarah (). The meaning of the name YHWH is not very clear, and
therefor subject to much debate. The key scene in this respect seems
to be Ex 3:13-15, where God names Himself first: (I Am Who I Am),
then (I Am), and finally (YHWH) and states that this is his name
forever and a memorial name to all generations. It has been long
supposed that YHWH is derived from the verb that is used to make I Am,
namely (haya 491) to be, to become, to happen, or rather from an
older form and rare synonym of haya, namely , hawa, hence y-hawa or
yahweh, the proper imperfect of the verb, thus rendering the name
either Being or He Is. (But note that the Hebrew language is far more
dynamic than our modern languages. The verb to be indicates an action
that intimately reveals the nature of the one who is doing the acting.
For more more on this, see our article to be is to do.)TWOTOT
rocognizes two separate verbs hawa: (hawa (484) is the aforementioned
older form of (haya 491), to be or become. (hawa 483) means to fall,
with derivatives calamity, wickedness, evil desire, disaster. Perhaps
this curious double meaning is in some ways comparable to our word
happen, as the words happening and happenstance are often used as
euphemisms for typically unfortunate events.TWOTOT goes even further
as it states, "...there is a problem with the pronunciation Yahweh. It
is a strange combination of old and late elements.[] In view of these
problems it may be best simply to say that YWHW does not come from the
verb hawa at all. [W]e may well hold that YHWH [...] is an old word of
unknown origin which sounded something like what the verb hawa sounded
in Moses' day. However, if the word were spelled with four letters in
Moses' day, we would have expected it to have had more than two
syllables, for at that period all the letters were sounded."In other
words, the name YHWH looks like a hybrid of times, as if it can not be
localized but spans centuries of evolving grammar. Then it also looks
very much as if it was derived of a verb that means to be, but which
is spelled differently than the regular verb to be, and similarly to a
verb that means something very bad. Perhaps all this confusion, or
rather, this wide pallet of negotiations is what this Name most
essentially conveys: existence in its broadest sense, yet unlike any
regular human perspective; a blessing to the wise, but the undoing of
the wicked.At this Michael the Archangel sat atop a throne, Sabbath
and barethread worn wood
and leather formed about it's frame. To the right sixteen rivets held
the leather stretched bare thread between the wood and the rivets and
each rivet to the next rivet and each rivet a dram[a]. To the left
sixteen rivets the same. To the front came eighteen rivets. To the
back came seventeem rivets.
[A]dram (dr) [1] a unit of weight in the traditional avoirdupois
system (see pound [1]), equal to 1/16 ounce or 1/256 pound. One dram
equals about 1.7718 gram. The word dram comes from a Latin weight
unit, the dragma, and derives ultimately from the Greek drachme,
meaning a handful. The word is usually spelled "drachm" in Britain and
"dram" in the United States, but both spellings are pronounced "dram."
The avoirdupois dram is sometimes abbreviated dr. av. to distinguish
it from the apothecaries' dram rami-, ram- (Latin: branch) ramus
(singular), rami (plural) : A branch; a general term for a smaller
structure given off by a larger one, or into which the larger
structure; such as, a blood vessel or nerve, divides. axiramificate
Denoting a nerve cell whose axon, usually short, breaks up into many
branches. ramicle, ramiculose A small branch (of a zoophyte).
ramicolous, ramicole Living on twigs and branches. ramicorn 1. The
horny sheath of the rami of the lower mandible of birds. 2. Having
ramified antenna, as with insects. ramifactive 1. A usually unintended
consequence of an action, decision, or judgment that may complicate
the situation or make the intended result more difficult to achieve.
2. The process of dividing or spreading out into branches. 3. A branch
or arrangement of branches. 4. Forming, or developing into, a branch.
ramiferous Bearing branches. ramificate To branch out. ramification 1.
A usually unintended consequence of an action, decision, or judgment
that may complicate the situation or make the intended result more
difficult to achieve. 2. The process of dividing or spreading out into
branches. 3. A branch or arrangement of branches. 4. The branches of a
tree collectively. 5. A branch or dichotomy; branching. ramiflorous
Flowering on branches. ramiform Branch-like; ramified. ramify 1. To
have complicating consequences or outgrowths. 2. To send out branches
or subordinate branchlike parts. 3. To divide into or cause to extend
into branches or subordinate branchlike parts. 4. Of trees and plants
or their parts; to form branches, to branch out, extend in the form of
branches. 5. To extend or spread in a number of subdivisions or
offshoots analogous to branches; especially in the anatomy of veins,
nerves, etc. ramiparous That which produces branches. ramisection,
ramicotomy, ramisectomy 1. The surgical division of a ramus
communicans between a spinal nerve and a ganglion of the sympathetic
trunk. 2. Surgical division of communicantes of sympathetic nerves.
ramitis Inflammation of a ramus. ramose Branching. 1. rami-, ram-
(Latin: branch).rami-, ram-. (Latin: branch). ramus (singular), rami
(plural) : A branch; ... The + sign at the end of a unit title means
all of the words in that unit have ...Decalcomania (from the Latin de
which means down, plus calquer,

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