Catchphrase time... just say what you see.

The Light of God lives in our hearts. Love, work, and knowledge are the wellsprings of the life He gives us; they should also govern it.

In response The Mac to his Publication

Skin of a hyena tied to a ship's mast

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Think G# and a Ring?

In response The Mac to his Publication

headless hanging geese coiled around a pole?

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a levitated pole?

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polarizing

lasering

accoustic levitation

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An optical vortex beaming

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a flocking migration

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A MIGRATE.

🕯

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From Ancient Greek ἔξοδος (éxodos), from ἐξ (ex, “out of”) + ὁδός (hodós, “way”)

AN EXODOS

In response The Mac to his Publication

late Middle English: from Old French annexer, from Latin annectere ‘connect’, from ad- ‘to’ + nectere ‘tie, fasten’.

In response The Mac to his Publication

Old English fæstnian ‘make sure’, also ‘immobilize’, of West Germanic origin; related to fast.

In response The Mac to his Publication

Old English fæst ‘firmly fixed, steadfast’ and fæste ‘firmly’, of Germanic origin; related to Dutch vast and German fest ‘firm, solid’ and fast ‘almost’. In Middle English the adverb developed the senses ‘strongly, vigorously’ (compare with run hard ), and ‘close, immediate’ (just surviving in the archaic fast by ; compare with hard by ), hence ‘closely, immediately’ and ‘quickly’; the idea of rapid movement was then reflected in adjectival use.

In response The Mac to his Publication

Old English fæstan (verb), of Germanic origin; related to Dutch vasten and German fasten, also to Old Norse fasta, the source of the noun.

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adjective: fast; comparative adjective: faster; superlative adjective: fastest; adjective: farse

1.
moving or capable of moving at high speed.

"go faster"

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: to try to do something that is very difficult and impressive

She always encouraged her children to reach for the stars.

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...a mother reaching out to warn her children...

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a warning sign

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warring (not comparable)

engaged in war; belligerent

In response The Mac to his Publication

late 16th century: from Latin belligerant- ‘waging war’, from the verb belligerare, from bellum ‘war’.

In response The Mac to his Publication

Inflection of bellus (“pretty”).

Adjective
bellum

nominative neuter singular of bellus

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In response The Mac to his Publication

From Old Occitan [Term?], from Latin bellus. Compare Occitan bèll, bèu, French beau, Spanish bello.

Adjective
bell (feminine bella, masculine plural bells, feminine plural belles)

beautiful

bell

Soft mutation of pell.

pell (feminine singular pell, plural pellafion, equative pelled, comparative pellach, superlative pellaf)

far, distant

Borrowed from Old French pelette, diminutive of pel (“a skin”), from Latin pellis. Alternatively a contraction of peltry (“skins”) from the same Old French and Latin roots. Norwegian pels, Norwegian belte

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pelt (third-person singular simple present pelts, present participle pelting, simple past and past participle pelted)

(transitive) To bombard, as with missiles.

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