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To: Aquamarine

17!!!!!!!!!!!

https://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=youtu.be&v=Qv0QG63ORkA&app=desktop


21 posted on 03/29/2020 12:39:31 PM PDT by defconw (Pray for Rush)
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To: defconw

Thanks for bringing it over.


43 posted on 03/29/2020 12:55:14 PM PDT by Aquamarine (Where we go one, we go all. ~ Q)
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To: defconw

Multiple meanings

Six feet apart
excerpts

Six (relating)
“sex” - Latin (trafficking????)
“little difference”
“hazarding all one’s chances,”
“exposed to great risk”
“left unsettled.”

foot
“pay the entirety of”
“add up and set the sum at the foot of”

Apart
“to grant, allot”

https://www.etymonline.com/word/six etymonline_v_23585

six (adj., n.)

“1 more than five, twice three; the number which is one more than five; a symbol representing this number;” Old English siex, six, sex, from Proto-Germanic *seks (source also of Old Saxon and Danish seks, Old Norse, Swedish, and Old Frisian sex, Middle Dutch sesse, Dutch zes, Old High German sehs, German sechs, Gothic saihs), from PIE *s(w)eks (source also of Sanskrit sas, Avestan kshvash, Persian shash, Greek hex, Latin sex, Old Church Slavonic sesti, Polish;, Russian shesti, Lithuanian šeši, Old Irish se, Welsh chwech).

Six-shooter, usually a revolver with six chambers, is first attested 1844; six-pack of beverage containers is from 1952, of abdominal muscles by 1995. Six of one and half-a-dozen of the other “little difference” is recorded from 1833. Six-figure in reference to hundreds of thousands (of dollars, etc.) is from 1840. Six feet under “dead” is from 1942.

Phrase at sixes and sevens originally was “hazarding all one’s chances,” first in Chaucer, perhaps from dicing (the original form was on six and seven); it could be a corruption of at cinque and sice “exposed to great risk” (1530s), literally “at five and six,” using the French names (which were common in Middle English) for the highest numbers on the dice. Meaning “at odds, in disagreement or confusion” is from 1785, perhaps via a notion of “left unsettled.”

_________________________________________________

foot (n.)

“terminal part of the leg of a vertebrate animal,” Old English fot “foot,” from Proto-Germanic (source also of Old Frisian fot, Old Saxon fot, Old Norse fotr, Danish fod, Swedish fot, Dutch voet, Old High German fuoz, German Fuß, Gothic fotus “foot”), from PIE root *ped- “foot.” Plural form feet is an instance of i-mutation.

The linear measure was in Old English (the exact length has varied over time), this being considered the length of a man’s foot; a unit of measure used widely and anciently. In this sense the plural is often foot. The current inch and foot are implied from measurements in 12c. English churches (Flinders Petrie, “Inductive Metrology”), but the most usual length of a “foot” in medieval England was the foot of 13.2 inches common throughout the ancient Mediterranean. The Anglo-Saxon foot apparently was between the two. All three correspond to units used by the Romans, and possibly all three lengths were picked up by the Anglo-Saxons from the Romano-Britons. “That the Saxon units should descend to mediæval times is most probable, as the Normans were a ruling, and not a working, class.” [Flinders Petrie, 1877]. The medieval Paul’s Foot (late 14c.) was a measuring standard cut into the base of a column at the old St. Paul’s cathedral in London. The metrical foot (late Old English, translating Latin pes, Greek pous in the same sense) is commonly taken to represent one rise and one fall of a foot: keeping time according to some, dancing according to others.

In Middle English also “a person” (c. 1200), hence non-foot “nobody.” Meaning “bottom or lowest part of anything eminent or upright” is from c. 1200. Of a bed, grave, etc., from c. 1300. On foot “by walking” is from c. 1300. To get off on the wrong foot is from 1905 (the right foot is by 1907); to put one’s best foot foremost first recorded 1849 (Shakespeare has the better foot before, 1596); Middle English had evil-foot (adv.) “through mischance, unluckily.” To put one’s foot in (one’s) mouth “say something stupid” is attested by 1942; the expression put (one’s) foot in something “make a mess of it” is from 1823. To have one foot in the grave “be near death” is from 1844. Colloquial exclamation my foot! expressing “contemptuous contradiction” [OED] is attested by 1923, probably euphemistic for my ass in the same sense, which dates to 1796 (also see eyewash).

foot (v.)

c. 1400, “to dance,” also “to move or travel on foot,” from foot (n.). From mid-15c. as “make a footing or foundation.” To foot a bill “pay the entirety of” is attested from 1848, from the process of tallying the expenses and writing the figure at the bottom (”foot”) of the sheet; foot (v.) as “add up and set the sum at the foot of” is from late 15c. (compare footnote (n.)). The Old English verb gefotian meant “to hasten up.” Related: Footed; footing.

____________________________________________________

apart (adv.)

“to or at the side; by itself, away from others,” late 14c., from Old French a part (Modern French à part) “to the side,” from Latin ad “to” (see ad-) + partem, accusative of pars “a part, piece, a faction, a part of the body” (from PIE root *pere- (2) “to grant, allot”). The first element is probably felt in English as a- as in abroad, ahead (see a- (1)). As an adjective from 1786.


45 posted on 03/29/2020 12:55:23 PM PDT by Cats Pajamas
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To: defconw

This is still the “Sovereign citizen” delusion, even here on the new thread.


58 posted on 03/29/2020 1:04:33 PM PDT by Disestablishmentarian (the right of the people peaceably to assemble)
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To: defconw

flatten the curve

entymological excerpts
_________________________________________

flatten (v.)
late 14c., “to prostrate oneself,” also “to fall flat,” from flat (adj.) + -en (1). Transitive meaning “to make flat” is 1620s. Related: Flattened; flattening.

curve (n.)

1690s, “curved line, a continuous bending without angles,” from curve (v.). With reference to the female figure (usually plural, curves), from 1862; in reference to statistical graphs, by 1854; as a type of baseball pitch that does not move in a straight line, from 1879. An old name for it was slow. “Slows are balls simply tossed to the bat with a line of delivery so curved as to make them almost drop on the home base.” [Chadwick’s Base Ball Manual, 1874]

_____________________________

flatten the curve

flatten - make flat

curve - the female figure

put a stop the trafficking????

spit balling over here


63 posted on 03/29/2020 1:17:19 PM PDT by Cats Pajamas
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To: defconw

I watched this stuff when it was being spammed on 8kun.
Sketchy, and roundly dismissed at 8Kun.


71 posted on 03/29/2020 1:29:00 PM PDT by EasySt (Say not this is the truth, but so it seems to me to be, as I see this thing I think I see #KAG)
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