Friday, August 8, 2014

Smita Talwalker RIIP: Tu Tithe Mee... "You Pay Me One Tenth"

The Deaths in 2014 site lists under August 6:
Smita's film "Tu Tithe Mee" stands out in a fashion that's in keeping with the inner twin worlds cryptic form of communication.  Keep in mind that my inner twin's name is "Tou" (see previous posts) and so this gives more meaning to the phrase hidden within re "Tou Tithe Me"... and because the French word "tu" means "you" in English, the sense then becomes "You pay me one tenth", or ... "you pay one tenth toward the inner twin (Tou's) cause"As well, this is an addition to the recently formed "Money" pattern-cluster, note for instance this excerpt from my recent July 30th post re "March of Dimes Times and Jonas Salk":
Upon the end of his military career, Gillen served for four years as executive director of the National Foundation for the March of Dimes in the 1960s.
We have been on a bit of a "Money" and "March" pattern-cluster theme as of late...
And as well, note the following from the post previous re "John M. Coyne RIIP"
Note his surname "Coyne", which is phonetically identical to "coin", so we have an "Echo" pattern-cluster, meaning that I recently referred to a "Money" pattern-cluster
So what are the chances of these notable persons listed on the Deaths in 2014 wiki page... individuals who died within a few days of one another having this audd cryptic connection to "Money"?!  These are NOT coincidences, the "timely" deaths are influenced by their inner twins and the inner twin world in order to "Come out" and "Communicate" to us-- the outer twin in our outer twin parallel world.  The truth is that we are all Chimera Humans and what we have long believed to be "our" subconscious is really the conscious mind of our inner conjoined/absorbed twin who is able to influence our thoughts and thus our actions.  Our world is always opening up to us, butt the question that remains to be answered, are we ready for this... and then again, does what we think even matter?!  It seems more than clear to me that the inner twin world are on the move and we have no choice butt to accept this reality.  

Note this excerpt from the etymology dictionary that the search engine had brought up when I keyed in the word "tithe":


tithe (v.) Look up tithe at Dictionary.com
Old English teoþian "to pay one-tenth," from the root of tithe (n.). As "to impose a payment of a tenth," late 14c. Related: Tithedtithing.
tithe (n.) Look up tithe at Dictionary.coma tenth part (originally of produce) due as support of the clergy, c.1200, from Old English teogoþa (Anglian), teoþa (West Saxon) "tenth," from Proto-Germanic *teguntha, from PIE *dekmto-, from *dekm "ten" (see ten). Retained in ecclesiastical sense while the form was replaced in ordinal use by tenth.
decimation (n.) Look up decimation at Dictionary.commid-15c., from Late Latin decimationem (nominative decimatio), noun of action from past participle stem of Latin decimare "the removal or destruction of one-tenth," from decem "ten" (see ten). Earliest sense in English was of a tithe; punishment sense is from 1580s; transferred sense of "much destruction, severe loss" recorded from 1680s.
tenth (adj.) Look up tenth at Dictionary.commid-12c., tenðe; see ten + -th (1). Replacing Old English teoða (West Saxon), teiða (Northumbrian), which is preserved in tithe. Compare Old Saxon tehando, Old Frisian tegotha, Dutch tiende, Old High German zehanto, German zehnte, Gothic taihunda. As a noun from c.1200.
dime (n.) Look up dime at Dictionary.comchosen 1786 as name for U.S. 10 cent coin, from dime "a tenth, tithe" (late 14c.), from Old French disme (Modern French dîme) "a tenth part," from Latin decima (pars) "tenth (part)," from decem "ten" (see ten).
The verb meaning "to inform" (on someone) is 1960s, from the then-cost of a pay phone call. A dime a dozen "almost worthless" first recorded 1930. Phrase stop on a dime attested by 1954 (a dime being the physically smallest unit of U.S. currency).
-ty (1) Look up -ty at Dictionary.comsuffix representing "ten" in cardinal numbers that are multiples of 10 (sixtyseventy, etc.), from Old English -tig, from a Germanic root (cognates: Old Saxon, Dutch -tig, Old Frisian -tich, Old Norse -tigr, Old High German -zug, German -zig) that existed as a distinct word in Gothic (tigjus) and Old Norse (tigir) meaning "tens, decades." Compare tithe (n.). 
What strikes me is the word "dime" was included in the mix, so "tithe" is connected to "dime"... and of course "coin" and "Coyne".  It occurred to me that the word "coy" in the surname "Coyne" could factor in, note the etymology:
coy (adj.) Look up coy at Dictionary.comearly 14c., "quiet, modest, demure," from Old French coi, earlier quei "quiet, still, placid, gentle," ultimately from Latin quietus "resting, at rest" (see quiet (n.)). Meaning "shy" emerged late 14c. Meaning "unwilling to commit" is 1961. 

I take this to be a reference to the fact that those who the inner twin world have approached ... namely those with money ie: Lloyd's of London, are "unwilling to commit" to the inner twin cause, and so the war continues and so too the timely deaths and accidents.   All that you need to do now, is to investigate what their cause is, and you can do that by reading this blog.

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