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An Inspiring Result motivates some educating views; of blog posts, from top of tower, implied by type-keyed font iamge; customizations AIRs a first for view! Topic expressed from the likes of the scientific, enginering, etc; as MERLIN'S PIT ~/(}or{\\~ MERLIN SPIT- the legends, tales, the person, whats being talked about, and whats not, etc.. (A google search linked:) MERLIN'S PIT ~/(}{\\~ MERLIN SPIT: (POST TOPIC HERE)ANACHRONISM Jan 11, 2010

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Saturday, December 29, 2012

A~R~O~M~A

PLESEANT SCENT ~~ a distinctive pervasive and usually pleasant or savory SCENT!

Planty Of Fish :-)

YUMMY

Ingredients

  • 1 whole red snapper (3 pounds gills gut and scales removed)
  • salt
  • black pepper
  • 2 heads fennel
  • 6 sprigs thyme
  • 2 sprigs oregano
  • 1 lemon (thinly sliced)
  • 2 tbsps extra-virgin olive oil
  • 14 cup water
  • 1 lemons juice
  • 1 tbsp pernod
  • 1 leaf fennel (reserved)
  • 6 tbsps butter (pieces)
  • salt
  • black pepper
http://www.yummly.com/recipes/grilled-fish-in-lemon-butter-sauce  http://www.yummly.com/recipe/Mediterranean-Grilled-Whole-Snapper-with-Fennel-and-a-Pernod-Butter-Sauce-Food-Network-278171?columns=2&position=13/36

Thursday, October 25, 2012

SUN CONJUNCT SATURN AND ECLIPSE CYCLE

SUN CONJUCT SATURN TODAY AT 2 DEGREES IN SCORPIO; October 25, 2012.
The official time and date awaits, the following data so far:
SATURN YEAR  10,746
EARTH 365 DAYS
29 YEARS PLus 27 days till we align with it again
THIS Difference in additional days till Alignment with Sun And Earth is about 27 Earth Days
if I have interpreted the data for planet cycles correctly.
365 x 29 = 3650 + 3650 + 3285  = 10,585  and the difference of days left over + or - ...?
FROM 10,746 - 10,585(29 years) = 29 years and 161 days till it returns to where Saturn was in its own year around the Sun, plus about 27 Earth Days till we realign with the Sun or till where we last met?

http://burro.astr.cwru.edu/stu/advanced/saturn.html

So which if either of the two? and where will I look for the answer?
Answer, an Astrology Ephemeris Chart for the symbols of Sun Conjunct Saturn (bing.com) Every Year till
29 years later it should be back in conjunction for a first time having completed an entire orbit around the Sun
A cafeastrology note found of declination( after an ephemeris look for the return in the Zodiac then,
a looc at the declination should show Ecliptic position (PARALLEL? Will that be enough to call it an eclipse...?? ) . http://www.bing.com/search?q=%22saturn+conjunct+sun%22+ephemeris+ecliptic&qs=n&form=QBRE&pq=%22saturn+conjunct+sun%22+ephemeris+ecliptic&sc=0-0&sp=-1&sk=

CAFE ASTROLOGY  EXCERT:  "To find out which planets are parallel and contra-parallel, we look to the listing with the heading "Declin" for Declinations.
We are using a one degree orb."
Determining Parallels and Contra-Parallels in Synastry
www.cafeastrology.com/declinations_parallels.html
We have a declinations ephemeris for the years 1940-2015. For those of you who use the software at Astrodienst.com, you can determine the declinations by ...

http://www.lunarplanner.com/HCpages/Synodic-Saturn.html

  • www.pas.rochester.edu/~blackman/ast104/revolution.html
    ... (which corresponds to looking down on the Northern hemisphere of the Earth) ... the plane of the ecliptic. As noted in conjunction with ... from the Sun (in astronomical ...
  • www.astrology-numerology.com/nodes.html
    The ecliptic is the illusory path of the Sun as it revolves around the Earth during a year. ... When the Sun and Moon are in conjunction, and ... restrictions of Saturn ...

    http://www.bing.com/search?q=EARTH+%22SATURN+ECLIPTIC%22+SUN+ecliptic+EPHEMERIS++ALCHEMY&qs=n&pq=earth+%22saturn+ecliptic%22+sun+ecliptic+ephemeris+alchemy&sc=0-0&sp=-1&sk=&first=9&FORM=PERE
  • Friday, August 24, 2012

    PIE *(s)wagh- Peak ; "merlin" "king arthur" "Maimonides" jesus astrology

    "To resound." - "merlin" "king arthur" "Maimonides" jesus astrology
    scholarworks.wmich.edu/

    THE INTERNATIONAL MEDIEVAL SERMON STUDIES SOCIETY

    CHARTER

    ARTICLE I

    TITLE

    The Society shall be called the International Medieval Sermon Studies Society (IMSSS).

    ARTICLE II

    PURPOSE

    The purpose of the Society shall be to promote and foster the study of medieval sermons and preaching in Latin and the vernacular languages within their social, literary, religious, intellectual, theological, catechetical, political and historical contexts. The Society shall also promote and foster the study of various artes praedicandi, and theories of preaching derived from them, as well as material used by sermon writers (e.g., Florilegia, commentaries, etc.)
    catechesis Look up catechesis at Dictionary.com
    from Gk. katekhesis "instruction by word of mouth," from katekhein "to instruct orally," originally "to resound" (with sense evolution via "to sound (something) in someone's ear; to teach by word of mouth." From kata- "down" (in this case, "thoroughly") + ekhein "to sound, ring," from ekho "sound," from PIE *(s)wagh- "to resound."


    katakana Look up katakana at Dictionary.com
    from Japanese katakana, from kata "side" + kana "borrowed letter(s)."
    cata- Look up cata- at Dictionary.com
    from Gk. kata-, before vowels kat-, from kata "down from, down to." Its principal sense is "down," but with occasional senses of "against" or "wrongly." Also sometimes used as an intensive or with a sense of completion of action. Very active in ancient Greek, this prefix is found in English mostly in words borrowed through Latin after c.1500.
    cation Look up cation at Dictionary.com
    1834, from Gk. kation "going down," neut. prp. of katienai "to go down," from kata "down" (see kata-) + ienai "to go" (see ion).
    onnagata Look up onnagata at Dictionary.com
    in Kabuki and similar drama, a man who plays female roles, 1901, from Japanese, from onna "woman" + kata "figure."
    catoptromancy Look up catoptromancy at Dictionary.com
    "divination by means of a mirror," 1610s, from Gk. katoptron "mirror" (from kata- "against" + stem of optos "seen, visible") + -mancy.
    catapult (n.) Look up catapult at Dictionary.com
    1570s, from M.Fr. catapulte, from L. catapulta "war machine for throwing," from Gk. katapeltes, from kata "against" (see cata-) + base of pallein "to toss, hurl."
    catafalque (n.) Look up catafalque at Dictionary.com
    1640s, from Fr. catafalque (17c.), from It. catafalco "scaffold," from V.L. *catafalicum, from Gk. kata- "down," used in Medieval Latin with a sense of "beside, alongside" + fala "scaffolding, wooden siege tower," said to be of Etruscan origin.
    catalectic (adj.) Look up catalectic at Dictionary.com
    1580s, "wanting a syllable in the last foot," from L.L. catalecticus, from Gk. katalektikos "leaving off," from kata- "down" (see cata-) + legein "to leave off, cease from" (see lecture (n.)).
    catatonic (adj.) Look up catatonic at Dictionary.com
    1908, from Mod.L. catatonia, replacing katatonia (1880s), which was formed directly from Gk. kata- "down" (see cata-) + tonos "tone" (see tenet).
    catalysis (n.) Look up catalysis at Dictionary.com
    1650s, "dissolution," from Gk. katalysis "dissolution, a dissolving" (of governments, military units, etc.), from katalyein "to dissolve," from kata- "down" (or "completely"), see cata-, + lyein "to loosen" (see lose). Chemical sense is attested from 1836.
    cathode Look up cathode at Dictionary.com
    1834, from Gk. kathodos "a way down," from kata- "down" + hodos "way" (see cede). So called from the path the electric current was supposed to take. Related: Cathodic. Cathode ray first attested 1880, but the phenomenon known from 1859; cathode ray tube is from 1905.
    catoblepas Look up catoblepas at Dictionary.com
    late 14c., from L., from Gk. katobleps, from kato "downward" (related to kata-) + blepein "to look." Name given by ancient authors to some African animal.
    A wylde beest that hyghte Catoblefas and hath a lytyll body and nyce in all membres and a grete heed hangynge alway to-warde the erth. [John of Trevisa, translation of Bartholomew de Glanville's "De proprietatibus rerum," 1398]
    cataract (n.) Look up cataract at Dictionary.com
    early 15c., from L. cataracta "waterfall," from Gk. katarhaktes "waterfall, broken water; swooping, rushing down; portcullis," noun use of adjective from kata "down" (see cata-) + arhattein "to strike hard." Its alternative sense in Latin of "portcullis" probably was passed through French to form the English meaning "eye disease" (early 15c.), on the notion of "obstruction."
    cataphract (n.) Look up cataphract at Dictionary.com
    "coat of mail," Middle English, from L. cataphractes "breastplate of iron scales," from Gk. kataphraktes "coat of mail," from kataphraktos "covered up," from kataphrassein "to fortify," from kata "entirely" (see cata-) + phrassein "to fence around, enclose, defend."
    catalepsy (n.) Look up catalepsy at Dictionary.com
    late 14c., cathalempsia, from M.L. catalepsia, from Gk. katalepsis "a seizure, a seizing upon, a taking possession," from kataleptos "seized," from katalambanein "to seize upon," from kata- "down" (see cata-) + lambanein "to take" (see analemma).
    catastrophe (n.) Look up catastrophe at Dictionary.com
    1530s, "reversal of what is expected" (especially a fatal turning point in a drama), from L. catastropha, from Gk. katastrophe "an overturning; a sudden end," from katastrephein "to overturn, turn down, trample on; to come to an end," from kata "down" (see cata-) + strephein "turn" (see strophe). Extension to "sudden disaster" is first recorded 1748.
    cataplexy (n.) Look up cataplexy at Dictionary.com
    "the state of an animal when it is feigning death," 1883, from Ger. kataplexie, from Gk. kataplexis "stupefaction, amazement, consternation," from kataplessein "to strike down" (with fear, etc.), from kata- "down" (see cata-) + plessein "to strike, hit," from PIE *plak- "to strike" (cf. plague).
    catarrh (n.) Look up catarrh at Dictionary.com
    late 14c., from M.L. catarrus, from L.L. catarrhus, from Gk. katarrhous "a catarrh, a head cold," lit. "a flowing down," from kata- "down" (see cata-) + rhein "to flow" (see rheum).
    cataclysm (n.) Look up cataclysm at Dictionary.com
    1630s, from Fr. cataclysme, from L. cataclysmos, from Gk. kataklysmos "deluge, flood, inundation," from kata "down" (see cata-) + klyzein "to wash," from PIE *kleue- "to wash, clean" (see cloaca).
    catalogue (n.) Look up catalogue at Dictionary.com
    early 15c., from O.Fr. catalogue, from L.L. catalogus, from Gk. katalogos "a list, register, enrollment" (e.g. the katalogos neon, the "catalogue of ships" in the "Iliad"), from kata "down, completely" + legein "to say, count" (see lecture (n.)).
    catholic (adj.) Look up catholic at Dictionary.com
    mid-14c., "of the doctrines of the ancient Church," literally "universally accepted," from Fr. catholique, from L.L. catholicus "universal, general," from Gk. katholikos, from phrase kath' holou "on the whole, in general," from kata "about" + gen. of holos "whole" (see safe (adj.)). Applied to the Church in Rome c.1554, after the Reformation began. General sense of "of interest to all, universal" is from 1550s. As a noun, attested from 1560s.
    catheter Look up catheter at Dictionary.com
    c.1600, from Fr. cathéter, from L.L. catheter "a catheter," from Gk. katheter, from kathienai "to let down, thrust in," from kata "down" + stem of hienai "to send" (see jet (v.)). Earlier was cathirum (early 15c.), directly from M.L. Related: Catheterization; catheterized; catheterizing.
    catabolism (n.) Look up catabolism at Dictionary.com
    1876, katabolism, "destructive metabolism," from Gk. katabole "a throwing down" (also "a foundation"), from kataballein "to throw down," from kata- "down" (see cata-) + ballein "to throw" (see ballistics). Probably formed in English on the model of metabolism. Related: Catabolic.
    catechesis Look up catechesis at Dictionary.com
    from Gk. katekhesis "instruction by word of mouth," from katekhein "to instruct orally," originally "to resound" (with sense evolution via "to sound (something) in someone's ear; to teach by word of mouth." From kata- "down" (in this case, "thoroughly") + ekhein "to sound, ring," from ekho "sound," from PIE *(s)wagh- "to resound."
    catachresis (n.) Look up catachresis at Dictionary.com
    1580s, from L. catachresis, from Gk. katakhresis "misuse" (of a word), from katakhresthai "to misuse," from kata- "down" (here with a sense of "perversion;" see cata-) + khresthai "to use" (see hortatory). Related: Catachrestic.
    cathedral (n.) Look up cathedral at Dictionary.com
    1580s, "church of a bishop," from phrase cathedral church (c.1300), translating L.L. ecclesia cathedralis "church of a bishop's seat;" with adjectival suffix -al (1), from L. cathedra "an easy chair (principally used by ladies)," also metonymically, e.g. cathedrae molles "luxurious women;" also "a professor's chair;" from Gk. kathedra "seat, bench," from kata "down" + hedra "seat, base, chair, face of a geometric solid," from PIE root *sed- "to sit" (see sedentary).
    category (n.) Look up category at Dictionary.com
    1580s, from M.Fr. catégorie, from L.L. categoria, from Gk. kategoria, from kategorein "to speak against; to accuse, assert, predicate," from kata "down to" (or perhaps "against;" see cata-) + agoreuein "to declaim (in the assembly)," from agora "public assembly," from PIE root *ger- "to gather" (see gregarious). Original sense of "accuse" weakened to "assert, name" by the time Aristotle applied kategoria to his 10 classes of things that can be named.
    category should be used by no-one who is not prepared to state (1) that he does not mean class, & (2) that he knows the difference between the two .... [Fowler]
    catawampus Look up catawampus at Dictionary.com
    also catawampous, cattywampus, catiwampus, etc. (see "Dictionary of American Slang" for more), American colloquial. First element perhaps from obsolete cater "to set or move diagonally" (see catty-cornered); second element perhaps related to Scottish wampish "to wriggle, twist, or swerve about." Or perhaps simply the sort of jocular pseudo-classical formation popular in the slang of those times, with the first element suggesting Gk. kata-. Earliest use seems to be in adverbial form, catawampusly (1834), expressing no certain meaning but adding intensity to the action: "utterly, completely; with avidity, fiercely, eagerly." It appears as a noun from 1843, as a name for an imaginary hobgoblin or fright, perhaps from influence of catamount. The adjective is attested from the 1840s as an intensive, but this is only in British lampoons of American speech and might not be authentic. It was used in the U.S. by 1864 in a sense of "askew, awry, wrong" and by 1873 (noted as a peculiarity of North Carolina speech) as "in a diagonal position, on a bias, crooked."

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