Monday, November 18, 2024

Nobel = Noble = To Know

 Given my recent post re “Dynamite Kid”, lets investigate the Dynamite wiki page; 

It was invented by the Swedish chemist and engineer Alfred Nobel

Alfred Bernhard Nobel (21 October 1833 – 10 December 1896)

Note his date of death and then note from my first post today, Neel = Kneel

Note the following recent additions to the Deaths in 2024 site: 
  • Al Ferrara  (December 22, 1939 – November 15, 2024) 84, American baseball player 
  • Jon Kenny (12 December 1957 – 15 November 2024) 66, Irish comedian and actor
On reading my recent posts you’ll discover that prior to the those two additions, there have been a rash of notable Deaths as of late who have birthdays in December but on uneven days, so there appears to be a switch to even days in December now happening.  What makes this even more interesting, is that I have two sisters, one born on December 14 and the other on December 18.  So we now have a “December 10, 12, 14, __, 18, __, 22/ Even Day, Date Sequence” pattern cluster.  

Note this excerpt from the Nobel family wiki page:

Members of the Nobel family are known not only for their interest in art but also for their inventive ability, which is sometimes referred to as a Rudbeckian trait, inherited from their ancestor Olaus Rudbeck, the elder.

Note from Rudbeck’s wiki page:  

Olaus Rudbeck the Elder (13 September 1630 – 12 December 1702)

The cluster expands now into a   “December 10, 12(x2), 14, __, 18, __, 22/ Even Day, Date Sequence” pattern cluster

Note the etymology :

noble (adj.)

c. 1200, "illustrious, distinguished, of high rank or birth," from Old French noble "of noble bearing or birth," from Latin nobilis "well-known, famous, renowned; excellent, superior, splendid; high-born, of superior birth," earlier *gnobilis, literally "knowable," from gnoscere "to come to know" (from PIE root *gno- "to know"). 

Nobel : 1: Swedish: shortened form of Nobelius a Latinized habitational name from a place called Nöbbelöv.2: German (also Nöbel): from a short form of an ancient Germanic personal name composed with nōt ‘distress force’.



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