KCIR2
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Librarian work is a highly specialized trade that requires a certain type of person like Marilu Henner.
I understand google couldn't find Paul Henderson and I also understand why since I invented google.
So today we are looking at why.
And as an example when a wealthy person in the 1800's need a cure they would go to a spa and get rest and relaxation and they had a term for that which was a verb.
If it was tuberculosis it would be a sanatorium and today we think of that as a nut house.
So then to allow your body to heal itself you needed quiet a rocking chair and a blanket and maybe sun maybe not and all the rest was quavery.
So as a doctor since it is quackery I would avoid storing quackery terms in my long term memory where I might find it and use it in my work which would not be what you want to do as a doctor so it is being blocked out.
I know the term exists in literature from the 1800's.
I know that there are a lot of associated words but the thesaurus will only find the noun not the verb and this is a verb.
So why Marilu Henner? If she can remember every second of her life she should be able to remember every book she ever read and it would have been in there.
Does it help her to find something like that maybe I don;t know because I am not built for that trade and know the amount of training in grammar languages etc to get you even started in that stuff.
So yahoo started out cataloguing information that was too slow I invented google using fuzzy logic it blew away the competition and is today still as I invented.
It clips paragraphs from a knowledge base.
So my people are at wits end trying to improve google and I told them if you recall my file system in my pc in my computer room in the office there it uses person place or thing animal vegetable and mineral.
So which is this? A thing, but a verb.
Where would you look in there to find it and does that help you at all?
So it is associated with mineral it is a retreat or spa verb. You go there to convalesce so lets use the thesaurus since that is a verb.
Why can we not find it? It is a term used in the mid 1800's to about 1900 and not used today it is used in literature from that time.
So my file system there is just the very first part of then having to categorize things in it and I said right away it all has to be done by objects.
Intangibles associated with objects.
But here even if you know a related object we are unable to find that verb associated with the object because the thesaurus does not go that deep.
If it is a noun it gives you nouns if it is a verb it gives you verbs.
Not word association.
So what you need is a human mind which has personal memories can then get word association related to the word by remembering an entire paragraph from a book from the past.
Lets say I really wanted to find out this verb, well I might have to think about every book I have read from that time period to even start to get close to that sentence.
And I am not a librarian and you have some but not with Marilu Henner's ability and that is probably what you need.
sorry I can;t help you hence why I said a rewrite since what I invented was temporary and cannot handle the complexity of a word that has 10 meanings and I gave the example skip to skip.
So google has no way to know which meaning of the word free I am talking about.
EG:
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free
/frē/
adjective
adjective: free; comparative adjective: freer; superlative adjective: freest
1.
not under the control or in the power of another; able to act or be done as one wishes.
"I have no ambitions other than to have a happy life and be free"
able or permitted to take a specified action.
"you are free to leave"
synonyms: able to, in a position to, capable of; More
allowed, permitted, unrestricted
"people are free to choose where they wish to live"
antonyms: unable
(of a state or its citizens or institutions) subject neither to foreign domination nor to despotic government.
"a free press"
synonyms: independent, self-governing, self-governed, self-ruling, self-legislating, self-determining, self-directing, nonaligned, sovereign, autonomous, autarkic, democratic, emancipated, enfranchised; More
self-sufficient;
historicalmanumitted
"a citizen of a proud free nation"
antonyms: dependent
historical
not a slave.
denoting an ethnic or political group actively opposing an occupying or invading force, in particular the groups that continued resisting the Germans in World War II after the fall of their countries.
2.
not or no longer confined or imprisoned.
"the researchers set the birds free"
synonyms: on the loose, at liberty, at large; More
loose, unconfined, unbound, untied, unchained, untethered, unshackled, unfettered, unrestrained, unsecured
"a known child killer is still free"
antonyms: captive
not physically restrained, obstructed, or fixed; unimpeded.
"she smiled, leaned back, and waved a free arm in the air"
synonyms: unobstructed, unimpeded, unrestricted, unhampered, unlimited, clear, open, unblocked More
"the free flow of water between adjoining tanks"
unattached, unfastened, unsecured, unhitched, untied, uncoupled, not fixed, detached, loose
"she caught the free end of the rope"
antonyms: obstructed, attached
Physics
(of power or energy) disengaged or available.
Physics•Chemistry
not bound in an atom, a molecule, or a compound.
"the atmosphere of that time contained virtually no free oxygen"
Linguistics
(of a morpheme) able to occur in isolation.
3.
not subject to or constrained by engagements or obligations.
"she spent her free time shopping"
synonyms: unoccupied, not at work, not working, not busy, not tied up, between appointments, off duty, off work, off, on holiday, on leave; More
idle, at leisure, with time on one's hands, with time to spare;
available, contactable
"he will be free at the weekend"
antonyms: occupied, unavailable
(of a facility or piece of equipment) not occupied or in use.
"the bathroom was free"
synonyms: vacant, empty, available, spare, unoccupied, untaken, unfilled, unused, not in use; More
uninhabited, tenantless;
informalup for grabs
"he found a free seat on the bus"
antonyms: occupied, engaged, taken
4.
not subject to or affected by (a specified thing, typically an undesirable one).
"membership is free of charge"
synonyms: unencumbered by, unaffected by, clear of, without, devoid of, lacking in; More
exempt from, not liable to, safe from, immune to, relieved of, released from, excused of, exempted from;
rid of;
informalsans, minus
"she was free of any pressures"
antonyms: encumbered by
5.
given or available without charge.
"free healthcare"
synonyms: without charge, free of charge, for nothing, complimentary, gratis, gratuitous, at no cost; More
informalfor free, on the house
"elementary education should be free"
antonyms: paid for, expensive
6.
using or expending something without restraint; lavish.
"she was always free with her money"
synonyms: generous, lavish, liberal, openhanded, unstinting, giving, munificent, bountiful, bounteous, charitable, extravagant, prodigal
"she was always free with her money"
antonyms: mean
frank or unrestrained in speech, expression, or action.
"he was free in his talk of revolution"
synonyms: easygoing, free and easy, tolerant, liberal, permissive, indulgent, relaxed, casual, informal, unceremonious, unforced, natural, open, frank, spontaneous, uninhibited, artless, ingenuous; More
good-humored, affable, friendly;
informallaid-back, unflappable
"he was known for his free and hearty manner"
antonyms: strained, formal
archaic
overfamiliar or forward in manner.
synonyms: impudent, impertinent, disrespectful; More
familiar, overfamiliar, over-free, presumptuous, forward, bold, assertive;
informalcheeky, cocky, pushy
"the children were rather too free with us"
antonyms: polite
7.
(of a literary style) not observing the strict laws of form.
(of a translation) conveying only the broad sense; not literal.
8.
Sailing
(of the wind) blowing from a favorable direction to the side or stern of a vessel.
adverb
adverb: free
1.
without cost or payment.
"ladies were admitted free"
synonyms: without charge, free of charge, for nothing, complimentary, gratis, gratuitous, at no cost; More
informalfor free, on the house
"elementary education should be free"
antonyms: paid for, expensive
2.
Sailing
with the sheets eased.
verb
verb: free; 3rd person present: frees; past tense: freed; past participle: freed; gerund or present participle: freeing
1.
release from captivity, confinement, or slavery.
"they were freed from jail"
synonyms: release, liberate, discharge, emancipate, set free, let go, set at liberty, set loose, let loose, turn loose, deliver; More
untie, unchain, unfetter, unshackle, unmanacle, uncage, unleash;
spare, pardon, reprieve, clear;
informallet off, let off the hook;
literarydisenthrall;
historicalmanumit
"the government freed all political prisoners"
antonyms: confine, lock up
release from physical obstruction, restraint, or entanglement.
"I had to tug hard and at last freed him"
synonyms: extricate, extract, disentangle, disentwine, disengage, disencumber, loosen, release, remove, get out, pull out, pull free, get loose, get free; More
rescue, set free
"earthquake victims had to be freed by firefighters"
antonyms: trap
remove something undesirable or restrictive from.
"his inheritance freed him from financial constraints"
synonyms: exempt, make exempt, except, excuse, absolve; More
relieve of, absolve of, unburden of, disburden of;
strip of;
raredispense from
"they wish to be freed from all legal ties"
make available for a particular purpose.
"this will free up funds for development elsewhere"