Sufi
1650s (earlier Sufian, 1580s), from Arabic sufi, lit. "man of wool" (i.e., "man wearing woolen garments"), from suf "wool." So-called from the habit of "putting on the holy garment" (labs-as-suf) to devote oneself to mysticism.

Friday, April 1, 2011

MIRACULOUS UNIVERSE - WOMEN HAVE WOMBS THAT BIRTH NEW LIFE

MIRACULOUS UNIVERSE - WOMEN HAVE WOMBS

This morning I am in the mood for writing an editorial. It is the human's gift to transmit meaningful sound - one human to another - that is a miracle so severely minimized in our culture that was constructed in the darkness of antiquity upon the TOOL of hardening word symbols onto rocks and paper and today an electronic form using alpha/numeric symbols and easy to use keyboards.

A FICTION CALLED A CORPORATION - 'person united in a body for some purpose'

fiction late 14c., "something invented," from O.Fr. ficcion (13c.) "dissimulation, ruse; invention," and directly from L. fictionem (nom. fictio) "a fashioning or feigning," noun of action from pp. stem of fingere "to shape, form, devise, feign," originally "to knead, form out of clay," from PIE *dheigh- (cf. O.E. dag "dough;" see dough). As a branch of literature, 1590s.

Walking into most any specialized law library will disclose our English language with a vocabulary base that constructs not only empires but also multi-national corporations that today are more powerful than individual nations. Nation/states have been replaced by global corporations that claim ownership of natural resources and governments are constructed bow to their power and greed with words written on paper that created these unnatural beasts.
corporation
mid-15c., "persons united in a body for some purpose," from such use in Anglo-Latin, from L.L. corporationem (nom. corporatio), noun of action from corporat-, pp. stem of L. corporare "to embody" (see corporate). Meaning "legally authorized entity" (including municipal governments and modern business companies) is from 1610s.
incorporate
late 14c., "to put (something) into the body or substance of (something else)," from L.L. incorporatus, pp. of incorporare "unite into one body," from L. in- "into" + corpus (gen. corporis) "body" (see corporeal). The legal sense first recorded in Rolls of Parliament, 1461.
Incorporation, n. The act of uniting several persons into one fiction called a corporation, in order that they may be no longer responsible for their actions. A, B and C are a corporation. A robs, B steals and C (it is necessary that there be one gentleman in the concern) cheats. It is a pundering, thieving, swindling corporation. But A, B and C, who have jointly determined and severally executed every crime of the corporation, are blameless. [Ambrose Bierce, 1885]
Related: Incorporated; incorporating.
A human does not need to be a rocket scientist to figure out the concepts in the term MARRIAGE has been expanded into the 'uniting several persons into one fiction called a corporation, in order they may no longer be responsible for their actions'.

marry (v.)
c.1300, from O.Fr. marier, from L. maritare "to wed, marry, give in marriage," from maritus "married man, husband," of uncertain origin, perhaps ult. from "provided with a *mari," a young woman, from PIE base *meri- "young wife," akin to *meryo- "young man" (cf. Skt. marya- "young man, suitor"). Said from 1530 of the priest, etc., who performs the rite. Related: Married; marrying.
marry (interj.)
a common oath in the Middle Ages, mid-14c., now obsolete, a corruption of the name of the Virgin Mary.
In our culture now in the transformational stage into an electronic rather than a paper culture, the becoming obsolete room in a library called the REFERENCE ROOM discloses shelves upon shelves of specialized English dictionaries upon subject areas I refer to as Auto Mechanics to Zoology. WORDS are humanly created TOOLS and DICTIONARIES are their TOOL CASES.

Theology libraries have but been replaced by Law libraries in a culture that birthed corporations now global corporations and humans around are now seen as RESOURCES by other humans sitting in chairs of corporate power:
resource
1610s, "means of supplying a want or deficiency," from Fr. resourse, from fem. pp. of O.Fr. resourdre "to rally, raise again," from L. resurgere "rise again" (see resurgent). Resources "a country's wealth" first recorded 1779.
FACT AND FICTION - A WOMAN'S WOMB IS NOT FICTION, BUT FACT

Women and children once were the pillages looted with wars. And, it will be WOMEN with WOMBS that will need to stand up to the FICTION of both the English words MARRY AND INCORPORATE and the creation of UNNATURAL BODIES!!

In Western Civilization it is simple to perceive that the Bible was written and passed through the centuries in the languages of Greek and Latin, and definitely not the American dialect of English:
Amer.Eng. American English, the English language as spoken and written in the United States of America.
Merchandising sells dolls and slave traders can sell babies. And women with wombs sit in chairs of power as corporate heads wherein humans are labeled RESOURCES with a human resource manager a label on an office door.

doll 1550s, endearing name for a female pet or a mistress; originally a familiar form of fem. proper name Dorothy (q.v.). The -l- for -r- substitution in nicknames is common in English: cf. Hal for Harold, Moll for Mary, Sally for Sarah, etc. Attested from 1640s as colloquial for "slattern;" sense of "child's toy baby" is c.1700. Transferred back to living beings 1778 in sense of "pretty, silly woman." Dolled up is Amer.Eng. 1906. Doll's house first recorded 1783 (dollhouse from 1873, Amer.Eng.).
The human brain is the primary organ of our central nervous systems and our brains DO NOT THINK in English anymore than it naturally thinks in Chinese or German. Self-understanding cannot really be initiated without perception of our form given the name HUMAN in our American dialect of the English language. SKIN is but the largest organ.
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The largest organ of a mammal is its skin.
Women with WOMBS are sold lotions containing petroleum to feed to their skin - the largest organ of their bodies and PETROLEUM LIKE HUMANS discloses another RESOURCE pillaged and looted in this age by global corporations with WOMEN WITH WOMBS sitting in chairs of corporate power.

WHO IN THE HECK functions to protect and nurture babies
if it is not WOMEN WITH WOMBS???

SKIN consciousness is childishness and WOMB consciousness is WISDOM.

A UNIVERSE is a WOMB for galaxies as our SOLAR SYSTEM is a womb for our planet. The WOMAN'S WOMB is a miracle now sold with the English word UTERUS and this English word was invented in the 1610's from a Latin term (Latin the written and spoken language of the ancient Roman Empire).
uterus 1610s, from L. uterus "womb, belly" (pl. uteri), from PIE base *udero- "abdomen, womb, stomach" (cf. Skt. udaram "belly," Gk. hystera "womb," Lith. vederas "stomach," O.C.S. vedro "bucket").
O.C.S. Old Church Slavonic, the earliest attested Slavic language, known from 9c. C.E.
There is alot to be said for the Old Church Slavonic term
VEDRO meaning BUCKET.

Women have BABY BUCKETS and men do not!!

And, each man arrived upon this planet due to their mother's own BABY BUCKET. My personal BABY BUCKET delivered 4 new humans in 1974, 1974, 1978 and 1979 and my mother's BABY BUCKET delivered me in 1950 out in Fort Collins, Colorado.

NEW LIFE in HUMAN FORM
form (n.)
early 13c., from O.Fr. forme "physical form, appearance, pleasing looks; shape, image," from L. forma "form, contour, figure, shape; appearance, looks' model, pattern, design; sort, kind condition," origin unknown. One theory holds that it is from Gk. morphe "form, beauty, outward appearance" (see Morpheus) via Etruscan [Klein]. Sense of "behavior" is first recorded late 14c. Meaning "a document with blanks to be filled in" is from 1855. The verb is attested from c.1300, from O.Fr. fourmer, from L. formare. Related: Formed; forming.

John 1:1 In the beginning was the Word, and the Word was with God ..


beginning
late 12c., "time when something begins," from begin. Meaning "act of starting something" is from early 13c. The O.E. word was fruma.

FRUMA - Wiktionary

Jul 29, 2010 ... fruma f. (biology) a cell
... Retrieved from "http://en.wiktionary.org/wiki/fruma" ...
en.wiktionary.org/wiki/fruma - Cached - Similar
begin
O.E. beginnan "to begin, attempt, undertake," a rare word beside the more usual form onginnan (class III strong verb; past tense ongann, pp. ongunnen); from bi- "be" + W.Gmc. *ginnan, of obscure meaning and found only in compounds, perhaps "to open, open up" (cf. O.H.G. in-ginnan "to cut open, open up," also "begin, undertake"). Cognates elsewhere in Germanic include O.H.G. beginnan, M.Du. beghinnen, Ger. beginnen, O.Fris. bijenna, Goth. duginnan.

O.E. Old English, the English language as written and spoken c.450-c.1100.


A SUFI teaches upon the mysterious CAVERN of the MOUTH
wherein sound waves exit and food enters.

Think: TONGUE

tongue
O.E. tunge "organ of speech, speech, language," from P.Gmc. *tungon (cf. O.S., O.N. tunga, O.Fris. tunge, M.Du. tonghe, Du. tong, O.H.G. zunga, Ger. Zunge, Goth. tuggo), from PIE *dnghwa- (cf. L. lingua "tongue, speech, language," from Old L. dingua; O.Ir. tenge, Welsh tafod, Lith. liezuvis, O.C.S. jezyku). The substitution of M.E. -o- for O.E. -u- before -m- or -n- was a scribal habit (cf. some, monk, etc.) to avoid misreading the letters in the old style hand, which jammed them together; and the spelling of the ending of the word apparently is a 14c. attempt to indicate proper pronunciation, but the result is "neither etymological nor phonetic, and is only in a very small degree historical" [OED]. Meaning "foreign language" is from 1530s. The verb meaning "to touch with the tongue, lick" is attested from 1680s. Tongue-tied is first recorded 1520s.
language
late 13c., from O.Fr. langage (12c.), from V.L. *linguaticum, from L. lingua "tongue," also "speech, language" (see lingual).

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