Friday, January 31, 2014

8888, the Ultimate Leo

As a followup to my first post today, note the following regarding the date of 8/8/8 (August 8, 2008):
August 8 is the 220th day of the year (221st in leap years) in the Gregorian calendar. There are 145 days remaining until the end of the year.
Since 2008 was a leap year, this date 8/8/8 is the 221st day of the year, hence an addition to the "Off By One" pattern-cluster... one off from the "888/Identical Number Sequence" pattern-cluster.  The inner twin world use the one off clusters to indicate that we are off track in so far as their greater scheme/mandate goes.
Note this excerpt:

Under the Births section:
  • 1988 – Ni Ni, Chinese actress
Note the twin 88 in the year hence 8/8/88.  The name stands out... Ni Ni (pinion-- is Grand mother in Chinese), and in fact I use this word/name in my Fanny Oakleaf story book as mentioned in my recent January 28 post re
Morrie Turner RIIP: Turn! Turn! Turn!   
 Go to my 2011 Toumai post re: Fanny Awakes!!  where you can read the rest of the book and discover the "Ni Ni" (I spell it as "Nai Nai").Note from Ni Ni's wiki page: 
Ni Ni (born August 8, 1988) is a Chinese actress best known for her role as "Yu Mo" in the 2011 film The Flowers of War directed by Zhang Yimou.[1]
Note the film, an addition to the "Flora..." pattern-cluster.  Note from the directors wiki page:
ing made his directorial debut in 1987 with Red Sorghum.[4]
Now THAT is audd... my gum's have been sore the last few days... I never get sore gums?!  As I've stated before, the inner twin world are able to influence a myriad of illness.  Note the following:

Release datesChina: 1987
United States: October 10, 1988
The film was released on 10/10/88,


Under the section Deaths:


An addition to the "white" and "mann" pattern-clusters, note from his wiki page:

Michael Wittmann (22 April 1914 – 8 August 1944) 

April 22 -is the 112th day of the year  
An addition to the "Off By One" pattern-cluster.  


Going back now to the first excerpt note one of the main characters during this Burmese event of 8888:

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aung_San_Suu_Kyi:
Her son visited again in 8 August 2011, to accompany her on a trip to Pegu, her second trip.[129]
The date is significant and so the only thing left to interpret from this is the place name Pegu, a cryptic "Peg you".

It's true that my name May is related to Margaret and so "Peggy" (Peg for short)... and the inner twin world does have me pegged... in more ways than one.

Note the following  etymology:
 peg (n.) Look up peg at Dictionary.com


mid-15c., from Middle Dutch pegge "peg," a common Low German word (cf. Low German pigge "peg," German Pegel "gauge rod, watermark," Middle Dutch pegel "little knob used as a mark," Dutch peil "gauge, watermark, standard"), of uncertain origin; perhaps from PIE *bak- "staff used as support" (see bacillus). To be a square peg in a round hole "be inappropriate for one's situation" is attested from 1836; to take someone down a peg is from 1580s, but the original literal sense is uncertain (most of the likely candidates are not attested until centuries later). Peg leg "wooden leg" attested from 1765.
peg (v.) Look up peg at Dictionary.com
"fasten with or as if on a peg," 1590s, from peg (n.). Slang sense of "identify, classify" first recorded 1920. Related: Pegged;pegging.
Pegasus Look up Pegasus at Dictionary.com
winged horse in Greek mythology, late 14c., from Latin, from Greek Pegasos, usually said to be from pege "fountain, spring; a well fed by a spring" (plural pegai), especially in "springs of Ocean," near which Medusa was said to have been killed by Perseus (Pegasus sprang from her blood). But this may be folk etymology, and the ending of the word indicates non-Greek origin. Advances since the 1990s in the study of the Luwians, neighbors of the Hittites in ancient Anatolia, show a notable convergence of the Greek name with Pihaššašši, the name of a Luwian weather-god: "the mythological figure of Pegasus carrying the lightning and thunderbolt of Zeus, ... is likely to represent an avatar of the Luwian Storm-God of Lightning ...." [Alice Mouton, et al., eds., "Luwian Identities," 2013]
Peggy Look up Peggy at Dictionary.com
fem. familiar proper name, alteration of Maggie (see Margaret).


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