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Author Topic:   Were the anglican church fathers employing lexigram ?
kAHANyAH
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posted January 17, 2003 05:38 PM           Edit/Delete Message

I was wondering, during the renaissance period, did the monastery use lexigrams or some type of word play ? Why do I get this eery feeling they used some type of word art to decypher the anglican bible ?

Peace,

kAH

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Randall
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From: Columbus, GA USA
Registered: Apr 2009

posted January 18, 2003 12:44 AM     Click Here to See the Profile for Randall     Edit/Delete Message
Interesting!

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"Never mentally imagine for another that which you would not want to experience for yourself, since the mental image you send out inevitably comes back to you." Rebecca Clark

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La-Tee-Da
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posted January 18, 2003 05:15 AM           Edit/Delete Message
kAH......I think there are alot of mysteries in words, yet to be discovered, and I think you hit on something with this question!!

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Hugs,LTD ~~The struggle keeps us young~~Daring to make mistakes and knowing there are none.~~DGM

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imajre
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posted January 18, 2003 05:21 AM           Edit/Delete Message
kAH,
I think maybe some theolgians may have referred back to a lexicon, (a dictionary, especially of Greek, Hebrew, Syriac, or Arabic) but if one of them uttered a squeak about a mistranslation they were soon silenced. One of the most complicated subjects today iS punctuation mark-S and So many libertieS were taken with popping theSe in here and there to make a meaning clearer but also by doing so it just aS often altered and hid a truth (like our Sneaky Snake does) and when the printing press started up in use Caxton was known to also add or delete letters depending on line space and he was the first to add the H to 'ghost'.
Early Latin and Greek manuscripts probably dating back as far as the 4th-8th century were often written in Uncial, a type of handwriting using large rounded unjoined letters and interestingly enough no punctuation marks. Now doesn't that leave interpretations open to various liberties? The following changes for example (in puntuation only, for now) is a case in point.
Genesis 1:27 So god created man in his own image. In the image of god created HE him male. And female created he THEM and blessed them and said unto them be fruitful and multiply and re-plenish the earth....

Uncial was also the forerunner from which our Capitals are derived.
Although many friars were set different pieces to translate in solitary cubicles never-the-less one way employed was that the monks in particular used a method which came to be known as Monks Latin, a corrupted form of Latin in their translations, but what better way to hide secret codes other than in plain sight so the truth couldn't be destroyed completely when Empress Theodora ordered parts of the Bible to be cut out.

Looking up a good dictionary and starting from the word lexical may help explain for you why Linda christened hers Lexigrams. [A GIRL'S REALM - SMILE GIRLS]. It will be interesting to see if it is eventually added as well. Most dictionary and Thesaurus compilers really only cover the last 15 centuries or so when trying to explain a derivation. Oh if they would only get it into their heads that Pure and simple English was our original language, on earth at least....well need I say more?


in Love and Light
imajre

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kAHANyAH
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posted January 18, 2003 07:10 AM           Edit/Delete Message

Thanks to everyone who replied. And that was deep Imajre!!! Never saw that. I will have to purchase Linda's book. Can you give me her full name and the title of the book ?

thx.

Peace,

kAH

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imajre
unregistered
posted January 18, 2003 07:49 AM           Edit/Delete Message

Linda Goodman's Star Signs

[And please be aware of her "Note to my readers" at the beginning of the book at the end of xii CONTENTS.]

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kAHANyAH
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posted January 18, 2003 10:30 AM           Edit/Delete Message

thanks :-)

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Hopeful
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posted January 18, 2003 04:35 PM           Edit/Delete Message
imajre -

kaH - you may want to raise this topic on Universal Codes as I know there are many there that would find it interesting and would have something to add.

Hopeful

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kAHANyAH
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posted January 18, 2003 06:07 PM           Edit/Delete Message
thx hopeful for the heads up. Will do.

Peace,

kAH

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Miracle
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posted January 18, 2003 06:34 PM           Edit/Delete Message
kAHANyAH, what made you ponder that?

Imajre, , in his usual thorough manner.

Yes, regrettably, "Surgery had been comitted upon the Holy Works". And many other too. I am of the view that lexigramming is actually our KEY back to correct spelling... as Linda so often discovered for herself and pointed out the way certain words should really be spellt.

There is a time for everything under the sun... So it shall all be revealed, when the time is right! I love each and every little step we take in putting the pieces of the great big puzzle together!

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LEXX
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Posts: 671
From: Still out looking for Schrödinger's cat.........& LEXIGRAMMING... is my Passion!
Registered: Apr 2009

posted January 28, 2010 10:40 PM     Click Here to See the Profile for LEXX     Edit/Delete Message
quote:
I was wondering, during the renaissance period, did the monastery use lexigrams or some type of word play ? Why do I get this eery feeling they used some type of word art to decypher the anglican bible ?

Peace,

kAH



Lexigramming and Anagramming are very ancient arts. They can be used for coding, secret messages divination and much more.
(Nostradamus and many others such as ancient Romans and Greeks employed such)
An Anagram is always a Lexigram.
A Lexigram is not however always an Anagram.
What some call an imperfect Anagram, can be actually a Lexigram.
Linda did not invent them, she only discovered the already very ancient art for herself.
She coined the word Lexigram, which was already the official word for the primate studies' Yerkish keyboard symbols. Not sure how she was allowed to use their word.

I have been interested in, and doing Lexigramming/Anagramming, for nigh onto
almost 5 decades to date...and so have much more info I intend to eventually share/reveal about them.
Here is a condensed history for the time being.

http://lexigramhistory.blogspot.com/2008/04/short-history-of-lexigramming-and.html

http://lexigramhistory.blogspot.com/2008/06/more-about-lexigrams-and-word-lexigrams.ht ml


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Everyone is a teacher...
Everyone is a student...
Learning is eternal.
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