NOTES: Matrix in Words; Words as Code; Magic & Spells in Words and Language; All Languages Derived from English Hypthosis

 Disclaimer

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bible_code

Notes: this just something I like to play with in notebooks and don't take too seriously. It helps me with in-sight. On the other hand, I feel something almost approaching loathing when I see other people write words like, in-sight, dis-ease, inner-standing. Nonetheless, I do it, probably because what it reveals isn't coincidental, and often I find these discoveries amusing - such as, heart and earth . Which leads me the following:

I lost my notes about my theories about how English is THE main coding language of this simulation/matrix, and the possibilities because of the coincidences in relation to matrix/simulation-specific coincidences how all world languages are derivations of English. Not so crazy, if we live in a simulated world, which, essentially, we do. I guess what I'm saying is that essentially it seems that something is mocking us or so it seems when looking at the English language with a bit of creativity. I don't think it's coincidence at all. 

American English uses "z". British English uses "s". British English spelling uses "u" which American English spelling often omits.

Computer terms in English that relate to older/ancient words:

Script-ure | scrip|true

Daemon - Ancient Greek god
Daemon (computing) - is a computer program that runs as a background process, rather than being under the direct control of an interactive user. Daemon - Ancient Greek gods.

Troll

Demon | Daemon - Modem

cryptic | pir-a-cy | city cpr

program | gramor(p) | gr(i)mo(i)r(e) | orgasm | (p)(r)ogra[s](a)m | 

archon | monarch | (m)archon | archon(m) | ranch(o) | orac[l][e](n)(h)  | car(h)(o)(n) | horn(c)(a) | corn(h)(a)

NASA | satan | NASA(t)
UNICEF | Lucifer | [l]ucife[r](n) - United Nations Children's Fund

Lucifer | lucifer | (l)(u)cifer | url(c)(i)(f)(e) | cruel(i)(f) | fire(l)(u)(c) | lure(c)(i)(f) | clue(i)(f)(r) | circle lufe

sold - sell | sold - cell | soul - cell | cell-out - sold-out - soulled | s|old

sol | soldier? or soul | soldier?

sp|ell c|ell h|ell y|ell s|ell t|ell f|ell w|ell m|ell b|ell d|ell kn|ell [means a funeral bell] p|ell [means hide/skin of an animal] qu|ell [means to silence, suppress or stop, often by force or violence] sh|ell also she|ll dw|ell

el- see suffix etymology | el- means God/deity in Hebrew.   sp|ell | h|ell [sp|eak sp|ace sp|ruce sp|ry

sp|ecial,etc with idea towards finding general meaning for "sp" and how it might link to meaning from "ell" and from these perhaps a new heretofore insightful meaning might be derived. Shit, that was a mouthful.]

secretion - secret | ion

scrape
[sc]rape   sc|rape | pear | pare | reap | [r]ape | are[p] | ear[p] | era[p] | par[e] | per[a] | rap[e] | rep[a]

magazine - magi - etymology doesn't link to magi in anyway on cursory view, but that doesn't mean a link doesn't exist. Don't have time to pursue.

I realize in general how silly this is, but I do finding it amusing. And given the state of our existence one never can tell what patters or secrets might be discerned from paying attention to things that have never given much thought.

dEATh | brEATh | mEAT | whEAT | wEATher | grEAT | thEATer | swEAT | trEAT | defEAT | bEAT | nEAT | sEAT | repEAT | chEAT | fEATher | blEAT | lEATher | permEATe ~ permeATE | enuclEATe ~ enucleATE | fEAT | hEAT | shEATh | clEAT | plEAT | benEATh~undernEATh | wrEAThe | creATE | mATE | fATE |

From Middle English:

-EATH
Adjective

(comparative eather, superlative eathest)

(Now chiefly dialectal) Easy; not hard or difficult.

Antonyms

-UNEATH
Adverb
difficult

(Now chiefly dialectal) Easily.

Anagrams

haet, hate, heat, HEAT, heta, Thea

Origin

From Middle English ethe (“not difficult, easy”), from Old English ēaþe, īeþe (“easy, smooth, not difficult”), from Proto-Germanic *auþijaz (“easy, pleasing”), from *auþiz (“deserted, empty”), from Proto-Indo-European *aut- (“empty, lonely”). Cognate with Scots eith (“easy”), Old Saxon ōþi (“deserted, empty”), Old High German ōdi (“empty, abandoned, easy, effortless”), Middle High German öde (German öde, “blank, vacant, easy”), Old Norse auðr (“deserted, empty”), Icelandic auð (“easy”), Gothic (auþeis, “desolate, deserted”). Non-Germanic cognates include Albanian vetëm (“alone”) from vet (“his/her/their own, self”).

-ate suffix
  1. (forming adjectives) possessing; having the appearance or characteristics of: fortunate, palmate, Latinate
  2. (forming nouns) a chemical compound, esp a salt or ester of an acid: carbonate, stearate
  3. (forming nouns) the product of a process: condensate
  4. forming verbs from nouns and adjectives: hyphenate, rusticate
Etymology: from Latin -ātus, past participial ending of verbs ending in -āre

-ate suffix forming nouns
  1. denoting office, rank, or a group having a certain function: episcopate, electorate
Etymology: from Latin -ātus, suffix (fourth declension) of collective nouns

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Do any of the above ideas suggest any kind of correspondence to letter frequencies in the list below? If high frequency, it could suggest they are added on to obscure or scramble meanings. Maybe a stretch, maybe not.

Language weaponized to work against us the magic/technology use of language? The fact that the hidden controllers don't use language but sound, telepathy and not written/spoken langauges.  

Fact - the hidden controllers do not communicate with language, though they have a kind of touretes thing going on by means other than themselves. The reason could be - and they push it - the computer, that is the HAL scenario, more or less.

5\19\19 - Look into Ted Chiang's work. "Critic John Clute has written that Chiang's work has a "tight-hewn and lucid style... [which] has a magnetic effect on the reader."[5] Chiang has commented on "metacognition, or thinking about one’s own thinking" being something most humans, but neither animals nor current AI, are capable of. He has also commented on the lack of competition or regulation on some major tech companies.[6]

Telling, language wise, his first work was called Tower of Babel.

See this interesting article: English is Not Normal



When I began thinking about how words and magic go together, spelling, grammar, etc - or how when writing a magic spells you are supposed to go back over the written spell and cross out all the vowels, leaving only the consonants. This made me want to working on trying to derive a general meaning from each letter of the alphabet, not only the consonants. I also want to investigate the origins of the English language (despite my theory above about English) - did the consonants come from one language, vowels from another? Or is there some other type of pattern or significance to be discerned from investigating the language in this way?

The following list has not particular meaning. It's generally just play. However, the letter M, and the combo Ma especially, intrigues me. The way to investigate is to go to root languages, which I know nothing about. But M, without having researched it all, hints almost without dobut to feminine deity.

What else is extremely important to investigte, though it isn't something I really have the time and resources to learn now, is the sounds - the vibration - these letter and word sounds make. The key to language, spelling, grammar to magic likely lies in the vibration or frequency the letters, words, spelling, language create.  Like Ohm.... 


Li - e
Li - ve : Ev - il  [I love the Eve in evil]
Li - fe :  Fi-ile [File : lie - f: what is the general meaning that can be derived from the the letter f alone?]
Li - ber [Book. Lie:File:Book; Fiction:code:story = human in simulation living a script]
Li
Li - cense 
Li - berty
Li - ke
Li -ght
Li - ability
Li - mit
Li -ft
Li -near
Li-ttle
Li -ti-gate [In-vest-i-gate] [gate=threshold guardian, esoteric, etc]
Li-brary

Letter Etymologies of the English Language
Find the underlying general sense of meaning that can be derived from each single letter of the English alphabet. Not unlike the meanings that can be derived from prefixes and suffixes.  

Ma-trix, Ma-tri-x
Ma-p
Ma-th
Mal
Ma-le
Ma-il 
Ma-n
Ma-te, Ma-t-ing
Ma-t-ter 
Ma-ter-i-al - Ter-res-tri-al
Ma-gic
Ma-gus
Ma-ga-zine
Ma-fi-a
Ma-st-er
Ma-r-ri-age
Ma-tri-mon-y
Ma-r-gin - O-ri-gin - Re-g-ion

M-o-the-r - F-eminine
F-a-the-r   - M-asculine

Mon-day - Fri-day
Sat-day - Sun-day


Disso-CIA-tion - how MK Ultra. And here we would say it's just a good coincidence. Coin-ci-dence. But who knows, maybe when they took the letters from a word like dissociation (because of it's magical properties?) and then came up with the meaning of the acronym after having chosen the letters? Not impossibility. Makes we want to investigate the letter "I". Well, look at that - In - vesti-gate


Evil - Veil - Live - Vile - Levis - Elvis

Prefixes and the Prefix “In”

Prefixes are key parts of English words. For instance, take the word prefix itself. Pre, which means “before,” is the prefix in the word prefix. Fix, which means “fastened,” is the “stem,” or primary part of the word. Thus, a prefix etymologically is that group of letters which is “fastened before” the stem of a word; that is, prefixes begin a word.
Today we will focus on the prefix in, which can mean “in, on, or not.”
Two highly used meanings of in are “in” or “on.” Let’s look at a few examples. In, for instance, can mean “in,” such as in the words inject, to throw “in,” and influx, to flow “in.” In can also mean “on,” used in such words as inscribe, to write “on,” and invoke, to call “on.” Hence, the first primary meanings of in are “in” or “on.”
The English prefix in can also, however, mean “not.” This is a trickier part of this prefix, but once you get the hang of it, it’s highly valuable in decoding English vocabulary. Some examples of in meaning “not” include insane, or “not” sane, independent, or “not” dependent, and invalid, or “not” valid.
By using common sense, context, or the process of elimination, you will find it easier to determine whether in means “in, on” or “not.” For example, inject, throw “in,” would make no sense as “not throw.” Conversely, the word insane makes little sense as “on” sane or sane “in;” rather “not” sane is the most obvious contextual choice.
In our next rootcast we’ll discuss the prefix in again, paying attention to its spelling changes as it attaches to various different stems. Just remember for now that in can mean “in, on, into or not,” and you’ll have this prefix mastered “in” no time at all!


The body: when you ingest something, usually a drug, its said to be in your system. You biological mechanical system

Letter Frequency:

A – 8.17%
B - 1.49%
C - 2.78%
D - 4.25%
E - 12.70%
F - 2.23%
G - 2.02%
H - 6.09%
I - 6.97%
J - 0.15%
K - 0.77%
L - 4.03%
M - 2.41%
N - 6.75%
O - 7.51%
P - 1.93%
Q - 0.10%
R - 5.99%
S - 6.33%
T - 9.06%
U - 2.76%
V - 0.98%
W - 2.36%
X - 0.15%
Y - 1.97%
Z - 0.07%

Missing one letter?
E - 12.70%
T - 9.06%
A – 8.17%
O - 7.51%
I – 6.97%
N - 6.75%
S - 6.33%
H – 6.09%
R - 5.99%
D – 4.25%
L - 4.03%
C – 2.78%
U - 2.76%
M – 2.41%
W – 2.36%
F – 2.23%
G – 2.02%
Y - 1.97%
P - 1.93%
B - 1.49%
V - 0.98%
K – 0.77%
X - 0.15%
Q - 0.10%
Z - 0.07%

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