Tuesday, December 31, 2013

Dawg Gone Dogs Part 3: Emily Carr & Her Dogs Flirt, Punk and Loo

EmilyCarr.png
Emily Carr
My previous post reveals a pattern-cluster involving renown Canadian Artist Emily Carr.  At the time this didn't seem to have anything to do with the predominant "Dogs" pattern cluster theme that was in the works, butt seeing as they occurred simultaneously, it was likely that the inner twin world intended to factor it into the present communication.  Your guess is as good as mine as to what it all means... and then something did occur to me.

Emily Carr and Her Dogs: Flirt, Punk, and LooOn further investigation it became evident that Emily Carr loved dogs and had even started her own Kennel at one point.  Note the picture at right that I found on her wiki page and note the cover of her Children's book "Emily Carr & her dogs".

And then it dawned on me.  A few days ago on December 29th I was sent a facebook invitation to like the site:  Good Dog Works!,  from a friend who's last name is Keir.  It seems to me that the surname Keir and Carr are similar enough to be related via etymology.  Note the following origins of both names:
As you can see, the names ARE related.  After all, a "marsh" is "wet ground".  This reminds me of an earlier post involving words similar to "marsh" continually cropping up as being a means by which the inner twin communicates "bogged down".

Note as well,  that the surname Carr and the word car are phonetically identical.  A particular inner twin strategy is to create this type of pattern with our words... so in some way "car" likely factors in... butt again, your guess is as good as mine.  On further investigation though, I noted the following etymology:
car (n.) Look up car at Dictionary.comc.1300, "wheeled vehicle," from Anglo-French carre, Old North French carre, from Vulgar Latin *carra, related to Latin carrumcarrus (plural carra), originally "two-wheeled Celtic war chariot," from Gaulish karros, a Celtic word (cf. Old Irish and Welsh carr "cart, wagon," Breton karr "chariot"), from PIE *krsos, from root *kers- "to run" (see current (adj.)). 
I also checked out the following etymology due to the obvious phonetic/definition relation:
cur (n.) Look up cur at Dictionary.comearly 13c., curre, earlier kurdogge used of both vicious dogs and cowardly dogs, probably from Old Norse kurra or Middle Low German korren both echoic, both meaning "to growl." Cf. Swedish dialectal kurre, Middle Dutch corre "house dog."
I get the sense of "bogging down vicious dogs", keep in mind the earlier cryptic relation to vicious dogs being equated to Zombie's/Psychopathic predator humans.  I certainly get the sense that the inner twin world aren't happy with our outer world, and they intend to bog us down-- a "cure" to help us get with a more "caring" program, one that extends not only to our fellow man and dog, butt to other creatures as well.  And that is where the TUSSH (the Two United Structure System Home) comes in!!


  

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