Wikipedia’s Deaths in 2024 site under todays date, April 24, 2024, there are two who stand out. The first:
His surname is an addition to the “Remove and Add a Letter to a Name makes a Word” pattern cluster and so we get “ill” and “chill”. Keep in mind that recent posts involve Post glacial rebound and isostatic adjustment from the last glacial cycle— a big Chill… where a “hill” also factored in re the TUSSH!!
That he was born on the 22nd day is also meaningful. We are being prompted to investigate further. Note from Hill’s wiki page:
He was a regular contributer to Channel Nine's The Footy Show in the 1990s.
The Footy Show catches my eye… remove the “y’ make “foot”. On the Footy Show wiki page, under the long list of presenters, one stands out:
His surname becomes “broach” as per the “Add a Letter Makes a Word” pattern cluster. And note the 1999 (triple 9 twin heads up!!). As well, his first name is related to Steven that gives us “seven”… and another &, as per my recent April 19 post re:
Stephen David Roach (born 24 April 1962)
His birthday is TODAY!! An addition to the “Timely” and “Targeting Birthday” pattern cluster… , and his middle name gives us “avid” when the “D” is removed!! And in the other lists provided on the Footy Show wiki page, there are three more versions of “Steven”:
Note from their wiki page:
- Jason Anthony Stevens (born 8 January 1973)
- Stephen Robert Irwin (22 February 1962 – 4 September 2006)
- Stephen Wright (born 13 December 1962)stage name Stevie Starr
All birthdays are meaningful!! January 8th is the birthday of my stepson; February 22 is also the birthday of my oldest grandson; December 13 is also the anniversary of my car accident in 2000!!! Even “Wright” (Starr’s real surname) fits— making “right” and “write”.
So why the “foot”?! Hmmm, foot the bill?!
As for the second notable person listed as passing away today, who stands out:
Rajvir Singh Diler, 65, Indian politician, MP (since 2019) and Uttar Pradesh MLA (2017–2019), heart attack
We get “sing dier” from his name, and indeed, the inner twin world are singing their song… and are certainly people who die for their song!!
- Rajvir Singh Diler (born 1 May 1958)
And there we have it … another “May won”!!
Hmm, it seems to me that “hill” and “chill” are related… , but how so— related by origin … the Hill Home to avoid the chill— the TUSSH. Note the etymology:
- hill (n.)Old English hyll "hill," from Proto-Germanic *hulni- (source also of Middle Dutch hille, Low German hull "hill," Old Norse hallr "stone," Gothic hallus "rock," Old Norse holmr "islet in a bay," Old English holm "rising land, island"), from PIE root *kel- (2) "to be prominent; hill." Formerly including mountains.
- chill (n.) Middle English chele, from Old English ciele (West Saxon), cele (Anglian) "cold, coolness, chill, frost, sensation of suffering from cold, sensation of cold experienced in illness," from Proto-Germanic *kal-"to be cold," from PIE root *gel- "cold; to freeze."
- *kel- (2)Proto-Indo-European root meaning "to be prominent," also "hill."It forms all or part of: colonel; colonnade; colophon; column; culminate; culmination; excel; excellence; excellent; excelsior; hill; holm.It is the hypothetical source of/evidence for its existence is provided by: Sanskrit kutam "top, skull;" Latin collis "hill," columna "projecting object," cellere "raise;" Greek kolōnos "hill," kolophōn"summit;" Lithuanian kalnas "mountain," kalnelis "hill," kelti "raise;" Old English hyll "hill," Old Norse hallr "stone," Gothic hallus "rock."
- *gel- Proto-Indo-European root meaning "cold; to freeze." It forms all or part of: chill; cold; congeal; cool; gel; gelatine; gelatinous; gelato; gelid; glace; glacial; glaciate; glaciation; glacier; glaciology; glacis; jell; jelly.It is the hypothetical source of/evidence for its existence is provided by: Latin gelare "to freeze," gelu"frost," glacies "ice;" Old English cald "cold, cool," German kalt.
- yellow (adj.)Middle English yelwe, from Old English geolu, geolwe, "yellow," from Proto-Germanic *gelwaz(source also of Old Saxon, Old High German gelo, Middle Dutch ghele, Dutch geel, Middle High German gel, German gelb, Old Norse gulr, Swedish gul "yellow"), from PIE root *ghel- (2) "to shine," with derivatives denoting "green" and "yellow" (such as Greek khlōros "greenish-yellow," Latin helvus"yellowish, bay").
- shell (n.)"hard outer covering," Middle English shel, shelle, from Old English sciell, scill, Anglian scell "seashell; eggshell," which is related to Old English scealu "shell, husk," from Proto-Germanic *skaljo "piece cut off; shell; scale" (source also of West Frisian skyl "peel, rind," Middle Low German schelle "pod, rind, egg shell," Gothic skalja "tile"), with the shared notion of "covering that splits off," from PIE root *skel- (1) "to cut." Italian scaglia "chip" is from Germanic.
- hell (n.)also Hell, Old English hel, helle, "nether world, abode of the dead, infernal regions, place of torment for the wicked after death," from Proto-Germanic *haljō "the underworld" (source also of Old Frisian helle, Old Saxon hellia, Dutch hel, Old Norse hel, German Hölle, Gothic halja "hell"). Literally "concealed place" (compare Old Norse hellir "cave, cavern"), from PIE root *kel- (1) "to cover, conceal, save."
- skeleton (n.) "the dry bones of a body taken together," 1570s, from Modern Latin sceleton "bones, bony framework of the body," from Greek skeleton soma "dried-up body, mummy, skeleton," from neuter of skeletos"dried-up" (also, as a noun, "dried body, mummy"), from skellein "dry up, make dry, parch" (from PIE root *skele- "to parch, wither;" see sclero-).
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