Friday, November 26, 2010

Breast Pumping Power Merilyn Sakova

The decoding of the first-person pronoun ("I")

  • It is incredible that the personal pronouns of the first person singular ("
  • I ") in the Indo-European Languages use a previously secret code that may prove as an image of the first man "Adam". In Tajik, Persian, Hindi / Urdu and Kurdish is the first person pronoun the same as the title of the first people "

    Man ", already 98AD Tacitus first as the Gallic people and Tuisco's child Mannus had identified ". In most African languages of the remote mountain regions, the first person pronoun as European in its original form vowel combination

    ieu, iau or iou receive, which in each case as IU symbols on an androgynous figure in the series IU -piter, Dieu, Diu, Diou, Dio, Dios, Dievas, IHVH relating etc.. In one case (in the Sardinian dialect Campidanese) is the name of the first-person pronoun eng even identical with the Creator God Deu . The old German (

    Ih ) and the English pronoun ( I ) refer In accordance with this formula to the deity Dis -pater, who as already by Julius Caesar about 50 BC, the Celtic god of creation was identified. A comprehensive study was published in:

    The hieroglyphics of the ego

    Breast Pumping Power Merilyn Sakova

    The decoding of the first-person pronoun ("I")

  • It is incredible that the personal pronouns of the first person singular ("
  • I ") in the Indo-European Languages use a previously secret code that may prove as an image of the first man "Adam". In Tajik, Persian, Hindi / Urdu and Kurdish is the first person pronoun the same as the title of the first people "

    Man ", already 98AD Tacitus first as the Gallic people and Tuisco's child Mannus had identified ". In most African languages of the remote mountain regions, the first person pronoun as European in its original form vowel combination

    ieu, iau or iou receive, which in each case as IU symbols on an androgynous figure in the series IU -piter, Dieu, Diu, Diou, Dio, Dios, Dievas, IHVH relating etc.. In one case (in the Sardinian dialect Campidanese) is the name of the first-person pronoun eng even identical with the Creator God Deu . The old German (

    Ih ) and the English pronoun ( I ) refer In accordance with this formula to the deity Dis -pater, who as already by Julius Caesar about 50 BC, the Celtic god of creation was identified. A comprehensive study was published in:

    The hieroglyphics of the ego

    Wednesday, November 24, 2010

    Pine Wood Derby Space Ship

    The hieroglyphics of the ego (Summary)

    pdf version:
  • The hieroglyphics of the ego

    In the main European languages and dialects, especially in French, Iberian and Italian, in the Celtic (South German and English) and Romanian language field may be a simple relationship between the ego-pronoun (I) identification and the name of God the Creator. The name of God the Creator is off a "D", the first person pronoun and a final "s", for example: The name identified the Caesar, the Celtic god of creation (Dis-Fr) is formed from a "D", the first person pronoun "i" and a final "s".

  • in the tiny village Villar-St-Pancrace in Westal

    pen near Briançon used first person pronouns

    iou me , or m 'iou , and the name God the Creator Diou were in the old-European culture so well identified as religious symbols (hieroglyphs), whose symbolism can be easily decrypted using the old androgynous creation legend in the Symposium of Plato. Here you have to because of the correlation between the ego-pronouns and the name of God the Creator of the associated start of a creation of the ego as the first man (Adam Cadmon) in the image of God the Creator. symbolize in the Indo-Iranian languages first-person pronouns, however, the first man "Man," Tacitus 98AD has already referred in his book Germania as the first German man and son of Tuisco. The European first-person pronouns also describe the first man Adam Cadmon, but use a different, androgynous model, which is documented in this essay as a hieroglyphic combination.

    Pine Wood Derby Space Ship

    The hieroglyphics of the ego (Summary)

    pdf version:
  • The hieroglyphics of the ego

    In the main European languages and dialects, especially in French, Iberian and Italian, in the Celtic (South German and English) and Romanian language field may be a simple relationship between the ego-pronoun (I) identification and the name of God the Creator. The name of God the Creator is off a "D", the first person pronoun and a final "s", for example: The name identified the Caesar, the Celtic god of creation (Dis-Fr) is formed from a "D", the first person pronoun "i" and a final "s".

  • in the tiny village Villar-St-Pancrace in Westal

    pen near Briançon used first person pronouns

    iou me , or m 'iou , and the name God the Creator Diou were in the old-European culture so well identified as religious symbols (hieroglyphs), whose symbolism can be easily decrypted using the old androgynous creation legend in the Symposium of Plato. Here you have to because of the correlation between the ego-pronouns and the name of God the Creator of the associated start of a creation of the ego as the first man (Adam Cadmon) in the image of God the Creator. symbolize in the Indo-Iranian languages first-person pronouns, however, the first man "Man," Tacitus 98AD has already referred in his book Germania as the first German man and son of Tuisco. The European first-person pronouns also describe the first man Adam Cadmon, but use a different, androgynous model, which is documented in this essay as a hieroglyphic combination.

    Monday, November 8, 2010

    Lump On Neck, Dizziness

    in Osnabrück!

    weekend (06/11/2010) I was on the live concert by my favorite singer and guitarist Steve Lukather.
    The concert was great, a real EXPERIENCE!

    He and his band his new album "All's Well That Ends Well" before and also played one more, two old classics.

    Lump On Neck, Dizziness

    in Osnabrück!

    weekend (06/11/2010) I was on the live concert by my favorite singer and guitarist Steve Lukather.
    The concert was great, a real EXPERIENCE!

    He and his band his new album "All's Well That Ends Well" before and also played one more, two old classics.