Showing posts with label etymology. Show all posts
Showing posts with label etymology. Show all posts

Friday, 15 July 2011

Time to help the cat with it's etymology

He's always digging around in the levant over a thousand years ago when it was right here in English at both ends.

B is V.

Baccine (backseen or baxine)

Back seen - A 'back' was seen. Perhaps a human thief, running away?
Back scene - A memory?
Backs in - Part of that most hated of phrases 'Put your backs into it' ....the whip cracks!
Back sin - What is a position of sin which a missionary should never be in? Yes, doggy-style.

Could any of those have found their way into a small number of people's trauma encoded ancestral memories? Between this blog and C4A, we've now located over two dozen examples of traumatic past uses of the homonym in question.

Friday, 10 June 2011

ममसत्य

ममसत्य is the Sanskrit word for a being mine. There are three uses of this word that we are interested in. One is male, one is female, one is both.

One, the accepted version, is that it means a 'contest of ownership' although it employs a spurious grammatical anomaly, it should be ahamsatya if it means that.

In it's prima facie form, mamasatya is a place where you would 'mine' for 'beings' as one might mine for gems. This association with mining suggests that there may have been elves at work, way back in the Vedics. Inner visions, either stress-induced, or plant-induced, or both.

The final and rather obvious possibility is that the beings are babies and 'the being mine' is the place from which babies emerge.

We will instruct the spider elves to run a context check on all instances in the literature. Damn cat! Nearly scared the life out of me! Be good.