Friday, June 14, 2019

The May in June

The Deaths in 2019 site lists under June 13:
Joyce Pensato, 77, American painter.[14] (death announced on this date
  • Joyce Pensato (August 20, 1941[1] – June 13, 2019) 
Note his birthday, and then note this excerpt from my previous post (posted June 12):
  • Philip Parris Lynott (20 August 1949 – 4 January 1986) 
His birthday is another addition to the “Targeting Family Birthdays” pattern cluster...  given that my father’s birthday is August 20th... AND, my fathers name is William!!! 
There was a cluster on my previous post that I hadn’t investigated:
“February 4, 5, 6, __,... 12 / Date Sequence” pattern cluster 
Using the formula to bridge the February 7th gap we arrive at:
2000  Doug Henning, Canadian magician and politician (b. 1947)
  •  Douglas James Henning (May 3, 1947 – February 7, 2000
There were just a few others, butt he stood out... mostly because of his birthday as well as the following info regarding two other notable deaths added to the Deaths in 2019 site under June 13 ... which happens to be my birthday:
And so we have a “May 3, 4, 5/Date Sequence” pattern cluster.... and note as well, my first name is May!!!  The inner twin world influenced the name of the Months.... and they influenced my name as part of their “Starr Family Production”— the means they have chosen to communicate and come out to us at this point in time.  Note as well that May 4 contains a cryptic “for May”... and that the etymology of the word/name, may, is “power/great ”... and is the basis for other words such as “might”, “major” and “mayor”....
may (v.1)Old English mæg "am able" (infinitive magan, past tense meahte, mihte), from Proto-Germanic root *mag-, infinitive *maganan (Old Frisian mei/muga/machte "have power, may;" Old Saxon mag/mugan/mahte; Middle Dutch mach/moghen/mohte; Dutch mag/mogen/mocht; Old High German mag/magan/mahta; German mag/mögen/mochte; Old Norse ma/mega/matte; Gothic mag/magan/mahte "to be able"), from PIE root *magh- "to be able, have power."
May fifth month of the modern calendar, early 12c., Mai, from Old French mai and directly from Latin Majus, Maius mensis "month of May," possibly from Maja, Maia, a Roman earth goddess (wife of Vulcan) whose name is of unknown origin; possibly from PIE *mag-ya "she who is great," fem. suffixed form of root *meg- "great" (cognate with Latin magnus).



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