Free Republic
Browse · Search
General/Chat
Topics · Post Article

To: Cats Pajamas

Wow!

It’s like a hall of mirrors.

fragments of reflected meanings

in every direction.

7


1,360 posted on 11/27/2020 7:01:31 AM PST by infool7 (When you have the Lord, nothing else is important and everything is fascinating! )
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1350 | View Replies ]


To: infool7

If anyone is up for a morning scroll.
https://mobile.twitter.com/Forecast432hz
Thanksgiving decode


1,386 posted on 11/27/2020 7:54:58 AM PST by Cats Pajamas (President Trump broke their algorithm!)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1360 | View Replies ]

To: infool7

Etymology
Excerpts

vaccinate (v.)
1803, “to inoculate with a vaccine,”

inoculate (v.)
mid-15c., “implant a bud into a plant,” from Latin inoculatus, past participle of inoculare “graft in, implant a bud or eye of one plant into another,” from in- “in” (from PIE root *en “in”) + oculus “bud,” originally “eye” (from PIE root *okw- “to see”).

____________________________________________________________

“graft in, implant a bud or eye of one plant into another,”

____________________________________________________________

Q drops mention twice that plants need water. Maybe plants need eyes and water.

Grafted plants have been implanted with eyes?

____________________________________________________________

graft (n.1)
“shoot inserted into another plant,” late 15c. alteration of Middle English graff (late 14c.), from Old French graife “grafting knife, carving tool; stylus, pen,” from Latin graphium “stylus,” from Greek grapheion “stylus,” from graphein “to write” (see -graphy). So called probably on resemblance of a stylus to the pencil-shaped shoots used in grafting. The terminal -t in the English word is not explained. Surgical sense is from 1871.

graft (n.2)
“corruption,” 1865, perhaps 1859, American English, perhaps from British slang graft “one’s occupation” (1853), which is perhaps from the identical word meaning “a ditch, moat,” literally “a digging” (1640s), from Middle Dutch graft, from graven “to dig” (see grave (v.)).

graft (v.)
late 15c., “insert a shoot from one tree into another,” from graft (n.1). Figurative use by 1530s. Surgical sense by 1868. Related: Grafted; grafting.

____________________________________________________________


1,418 posted on 11/27/2020 8:59:05 AM PST by Cats Pajamas (President Trump broke their algorithm!)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1360 | View Replies ]

Free Republic
Browse · Search
General/Chat
Topics · Post Article


FreeRepublic, LLC, PO BOX 9771, FRESNO, CA 93794
FreeRepublic.com is powered by software copyright 2000-2008 John Robinson