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.
Skin of a hyena tied to a ship's mast
Think G# and a Ring?
headless hanging geese coiled around a pole?
a levitated pole?
polarizing
lasering
accoustic levitation
An optical vortex beaming
a flocking migration
A MIGRATE.
π―
From Ancient Greek αΌΞΎΞΏΞ΄ΞΏΟ (Γ©xodos), from αΌΞΎ (ex, βout ofβ) + α½Ξ΄ΟΟ (hodΓ³s, βwayβ)
AN EXODOS
late Middle English: from Old French annexer, from Latin annectere βconnectβ, from ad- βtoβ + nectere βtie, fastenβ.
Old English fΓ¦stnian βmake sureβ, also βimmobilizeβ, of West Germanic origin; related to fast.
Old English fΓ¦st βfirmly fixed, steadfastβ and fΓ¦ste βfirmlyβ, of Germanic origin; related to Dutch vast and German fest βfirm, solidβ and fast βalmostβ. In Middle English the adverb developed the senses βstrongly, vigorouslyβ (compare with run hard ), and βclose, immediateβ (just surviving in the archaic fast by ; compare with hard by ), hence βclosely, immediatelyβ and βquicklyβ; the idea of rapid movement was then reflected in adjectival use.
Old English fæstan (verb), of Germanic origin; related to Dutch vasten and German fasten, also to Old Norse fasta, the source of the noun.
adjective: fast; comparative adjective: faster; superlative adjective: fastest; adjective: farse
1.
moving or capable of moving at high speed.
"go faster"
physics & grammer π ... glad you kept posting Mac ... we all need to keep learning and in todayβs world proper grammer is a lost art!
Good morning Mac! Ancient Tesla coil - Energy generator - someone had recently posted a neat clip that demonstrated how to create your own mini generator. i have everything I need except the large magnets.
energise (Commonwealth English)
Verb
energize (third-person singular simple present energizes, present participle energizing, simple past and past participle energized)
(transitive) To invigorate; to make energetic.
(transitive) To supply with energy, especially electricity; to turn on power to (something).
Whenever we energize that circuit we blow a fuse.
(intransitive, obsolete) To use strength in action; to act or operate with force or vigor; to act in producing an effect.
God bless your soul. ππ»β€οΈ
Right back βatcha Mac, TEN FOLD!πππ