On perusing back through the Deaths in 2013 site, I noticed an addition to the list under June 4th:
- Will Wynn, 64, American football player (Philadelphia Eagles), heart failure.[21]
Whoa... talk about names that have "other" meaning?! Nott only that, Will Wynn is an addition to the "Alliteration" pattern-cluster that has recently cropped up, and nott just in regards to deaths of notable persons, note the following excerpt from my recent April 27th post entitled, Associate Chief Justice Deborah K. Smith in the Black..:
After I was rolled into the operating room, the only man present on the surgical team spoke.
"So, May-Moniqued Mary," he hesitated, "... your parents must like alliteration".
I responded with, "I just tell people to call me 'mmm-mmm-mmm' for short".
The women laughed butt he didn't. "it'd be even funnier if your last name was 'Good'", one of the women followed along.May-Monique Mary is my first and middle names (I actually go by "May")... and I was in the middle of preparations for an appendectomy. This was another of the inner twin world's planned events, nott as bad as my motor vehicle accident... nott as bad as my court battle... and certainly nott as bad as death, butt badd non the less!! What most people are yet unaware of, is that our inner twins are orchestrating these scenario's... including bringing about death (their own in the process), in order to "come out" and "communicate" to us at this point in time.
Over the course of the last couple of months, many names listed on the Deaths in 2012 contain little phrases-- words that have meaning. My previous post entitled, RIIP Chris Levoir, "Chris He See's the Mark Inside", involving the death of Chris Levoir, musician with the band, The Mark Inside, also includes a phrase in his name... given that "voir" is French for "to see", hence the title re "He see's the mark inside".
The obvious phrase in "Will Wynn", was enough to warrant further investigation, and so I ventured to his wiki page, and nearly fell off my seat when noting his date of birth:
William "Will" Wynn (born January 15, 1949, in Apex, North Carolina- died June 4, 2013 in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania)To understand why his birthday, January 15th, is so meaningful, note this next excerpt taken from another post I made on June 4, 2013 entitled, Nadine Brown RIIP, Trousers Smith RIIP and McBride...:
So we have yet another Smith cropping upp... and a lovie one at that. And note the next sentence:
- Lovie Smith, hired on January 15, 2004, is the third post-Ditka head coach.
January 15th is a very meaningful day considering this is the birthday of both my son and my partner!! The day has also formed a major pattern-cluster. On reading the Bears wiki page further I then noted the followingSo, first of all, what are the chances of two of the most important people in my life being born on the very same day... and then what are the chances of while in the midst of checking out sources regarding Chicago Bears, Ron Smith, who was also listed on the Deaths in 2013 site under June 2nd, that a "Lovie Smith" would crop up... as well as the date of January 15th.
The inner twin world are moving at a much faster rate these days... I guess, like a good smithy they're striking while the iron's hot.
So the question is, "WHAT Will Wynn"... and/or "Who Will Wynn WHAT" ?!
Note the etymology of the word "win"
win (v.) ... from Proto-Germanic *wenwanan (cf. Old Saxon winnan, Old Norse vinna, Old Frisian winna, Dutch winnen "to gain, win," Danish vinde "to win," Old High German winnan "to strive, struggle, fight," German gewinnen "to gain, win," Gothic gawinnen "to suffer, toil").As you can see by the etymology, two origins of the word win, has a "g" in front of it. This is particularly meaningful given my previous post (Here), that at one point had focused on the letter "G", note this excerpt:
The first names of the band members at the time of the album all beginning with "G" except Chris.Since the above etymology refers to the definition of win as meaning "to gain", which happens to begin with the letter "g", I decided to check out the etymology:
gain (v.) 1520s, from Middle French gagner, from Old French gaaignier "to earn, gain; trade; capture, win," also "work in the fields, cultivate land,"...Both the name/word "Will" and "win", have factored in previous posts that led to pretty much the same conclusion-- that the letter "g" had been dropped. Note the etymology of will:
will (v.) Old English *willan, wyllan "to wish, desire, want" (past tense wolde), from Proto-Germanic *welljan (cf. Old Saxon willian, Old Norse vilja, Old Frisian willa, Dutch willen, Old High German wellan, German wollen, Gothic wiljan "to will, wish, desire," Gothic waljan "to choose"). The Germanic words are from PIE *wel-/*wol- "be pleasing" (cf. Sanskrit vrnoti "chooses, prefers," varyah "to be chosen, eligible, excellent," varanam "choosing;" Avestan verenav- "to wish, will, choose;" Greek elpis "hope;" Latin volo, velle"to wish, will, desire;" Old Church Slavonic voljo, voliti "to will," veljo, veleti "to command;" Lithuanian velyti "to wish, favor," pa-vel-mi "I will," viliuos "I hope;" Welsh gwell"better").What you need to note most of all from the above is the gwell in the very last section re: Welsh gwell "better". This is not the first time that the letter "g" and its origin "k", had been dropped from words of old, butt etymology reveals that some cultures managed to retain it. Note this next excerpt from my recent May 31 post entitled, AQUITO: Ourstory:
The above etymology shows just one example of how the "qw" in older words evolved into "wh" of modern words. The 5 W's -- who, what, when, where, why follow the same pattern, note for example the etymology:
As you can see, in the above, the "K" and "Q" that had previously began each word, was softened into the "H" sound" and moved behind the "w"... that is in the English language anyway... not in French though, where the hard "K" sound beginning each word had been preserved and written as "Q". You can see this "softening" in the Spanish name José, where the "J" is pronounced more like an "H". In fact, many of our words beginning with "Y" like "yellow" was a "g" in origin (but still retained, albeit somewhat softer, in our English word "gold" and the French word "jaune").
- who (pron.) Old English hwa, from Proto-Germanic *khwas, *khwes, *khwo (cf. Old Saxon hwe, Danish hvo, Swedish vem, Old Frisian hwa, Dutch wie, Old High German hwer, German wer, Gothic hvo (fem.) "who"), from PIE *kwo-
- why Old English hwi, instrumental case (showing for what purpose or by what means) of hwæt (see what), from Proto-Germanic *khwi (cf. Old Saxon hwi, Old Norse hvi), from PIE*qwei, locative of *qwo- "who"
So now we come to Will Wynn. Note the following information taken from the etymology of names site; http://www.behindthename.com/name/guillaume in regards to the name "Guillaume":
French form of WILLIAM
OTHER LANGUAGES: Wilhelm, Willahelm (Ancient Germanic), Gwilherm (Breton), Guillem (Catalan), Vilim, Vilko (Croatian), Vilém (Czech), Vilhelm (Danish), Willem,Jelle, Pim, Wil, Willy, Wim (Dutch), William, Bill, Billie, Billy, Liam, Wil, Will, Willie, Willy (English), Vilhelmo, Vilĉjo (Esperanto), Villem (Estonian), Vilhelmi, Viljami,Vilho, Viljo, Ville (Finnish), Wilhelm, Willi, Willy, Wim (German), Vilhelm, Vilmos, Vili (Hungarian), Vilhjálmur (Icelandic), Uilliam, Liam, Uilleag, Ulick (Irish), Guglielmo (Italian),Vilhelms, Vilis (Latvian), Wöllem, Wullem, Wum (Limburgish), Vilhelmas (Lithuanian), Illiam (Manx), Wiremu (Maori), Wilkin, Wilky, Wilmot (Medieval English), Vilhelm (Norwegian),Wilhelm (Polish), Guilherme (Portuguese), Uilleam (Scottish), Viliam (Slovak), Viljem, Vili, Vilko (Slovene), Guillermo (Spanish), Vilhelm, Ville (Swedish), Gwilym, Gwil, Gwilim,Gwillym (Welsh)Now we come to another name that I played with in the title: Philadelphia, where I dropped the first two letters "Ph" and replaced it with a "Kw". Now here's the catch: the "Ph" (which evolved into the "V", "U", "W" and "F" sounds) was in origin reversed from "Hp" (in the same way as "wh" had been reversed from "hw" origins) ... AND, the "H" is a softened version of the original hard "K/C" sound, with the origin being closer to Kah-ap. The origin of "Philadelphia" which comes from two words, re: Phila and Delphia, would be more like: Kah-ap-ila and Delphia. So note the following from wikipedia :
Kaph (also spelled Kaf) is the eleventh letter of many Semiticabjads, including Phoenician, Aramaic, Arabic Kāf ك (in Abjadi order), Hebrew Kaf כ.Note the following etymology that gives other evidence of the "PH" and "F" having a hard "K" sound in origin:
The Phoenician letter gave rise to the Greek Kappa (Κ), Latin K, andCyrillic К.
favor (n.) c.1300, "attractiveness, charm," from Old French favor (13c., Modern French faveur) "favor, approval, partiality," from Latin favorem (nominative favor) "good will, inclination, partiality, support," coined by Cicero from stem of favere "to show kindness to," from PIE *ghow-e- "to honor, revere, worship."
four (n.) Old English feower, from Proto-Germanic *petwor- (cf. Old Saxon fiwar, Old Frisian fiuwer, Frankish *fitter-, Dutch and German vier, Old Norse fjorir, Danish fire, Swedishfyra, Gothic fidwor "four"), from PIE *kwetwer- "four"With "square" now coming into the picture, we are beginning to see another letter that was dropped in the origin-- the "s", with the origin being closer to "skah-ap" (duplicated as indicated by the "w"), the origin of this ancient word that begins many of our words today... albeit greatly modified, was referred to as "Ska-ap--Ska-ap". It is a reference to the upper and lower halves of the ancient TUSSH... the system home that enabled our ancestors to survive the frozen permafrost lands of the last glacial event.
square (n.) c.1300, "tool for measuring right angles," from Old French esquire "a square, squareness," from Vulgar Latin *exquadra, from *exquadrare "to square," from Latin ex- "out" (see ex-) + quadrare "make square, set in order, complete" (see quadrant)
If you're interested in learning more about the TUSSH, go to these three recent posts
-Berg RIIP, Burke RIIP, Burns RIIP, Birrell RIIP, ...Since Will Wynn was a football player, I decided to go to the Philadelphia Eagles web site http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Philadelphia_Eagles, in order to peruse through the list of players... AND their jersey number, to see if from among the "twin" numbers are any clues... similar to what occurred in my previous post, note what I found:
-THE "Inner NET" (UPDATE: Nott and Sere)
-RIIP 222 and the TUSSH
There was another person who wore number 77 tho:
- 77 Damion Square DE
Note the etymology re the word/name "Wang":
- 77 Ed Wang T
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wang_(surname) 王 is the Chinese word for "king". William Baxter and Laurent Sagart reconstructed theOld Chinese form of Wáng as *ɢʷaŋ and the Middle Chinese as hjwang.[1]汪 is the Chinese onomatopoeia for the sound of a barking dog. Baxter and Sagart reconstructed it as *qʷˤaŋ and 'wang, respectively.[2]
http://www.hantrainerpro.com/dictionary/chinese-english/translation-wang_net.htmNow you can understand how King and Wang are related... just put the "K" sound in front of wang and you get "Kwang"... much closer to king. Note the other Philadelphia Eagles who word twin numbers:
net, network, to catch with a net
to go, past, to be bound for, formerly, to depart, gone
to yearn for | in the past
So anyone else willing to jump in, orr do I still have to carry this bigg heavy ball on my own?!
- 22 Brandon Boykin CB
- 33 Jordan Poyer CB
UPDATE: Note this excerpt from Will Wyn's wiki page:
Games played | 55 |
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