Wednesday, March 4, 2026

A Ping and a Pingo


 Note the following information in regards to a notable person recently added to Wikipedia’s Deaths in 2026 site, who are additions to the recent “First and Last 2 Letters in Name Makes a Word” pattern cluster, and who died  beginning today , March 4, and going back to February 28: 

  • Song Ping (24 April 1917 – 4 March 2026)                                                              (*ping)**
  • Peter Schneider (21 April 1940 – March 2026)                                                        (*peer)**
  • Gabriele Vianello (6 May 1938 – 3 March 2026)                                                      (*gale)
  • Daniel Migliore ( died March 2, 2026) 90, American theologian                              (*mire)**
  • Chase Pistone (August 20, 1983 – March 2026)                                                        (*pine)
  • Pockets Warhol (April 1, 1992 – March 2, 2026)                                                      (*pots)**
  • Janardan Madhavrao Waghmare (11 November 1934 – 2 March 2026)              (*ware)**
  • Andrew Gunn (July 15, 1969 – March 2, 2026)                                                      (*anew)**
  • Käthe Menzel-Jordan (née Hertel; 7 September 1916 – 1 March 2026)        (*meel; heel)
  • Neville Douglas Peat (29 November 1947 – 1 March 2026)                                     (*peat)**
  • Lorraine Daphne Bayly (16 January 1937 – 28 February 2026)                      (*lone dane)
  • John Paul Hammond (November 13, 1942 – February 28, 2026)                           (*hand)
  • Claude Lacaze (5 March 1940 – 28 February 2026)                                                   (*laze)
The ones having double ** at the end, are more meaningful to me.  Take for instance that the surname Ping is also an addition to the “Add a Letter to Name Makes a Word” pattern cluster and so making “Pingo”, and the fact that Pingo’s are often associated with peat as they are both found in the far north. Keep in mind that the word “Pingo” has cropped up just recently via Justice Chiasson’s Decision … where she makes reference to “Pingo theory”. So the first three essentially communicates “Pingo see mire/marsh ”.  Indeed if you investigate— Pingo’s are turning into a wet marsh — their ice core melting along with the permafrost peat surrounding.  You can take if from there.  

If you key in Pingo, in this blogs search box, you’ll get somewhat of an idea that’s Justice Chiasson is referring to, and you will also see that other words above factor in …like “pots”… Pingo’s are after all big water pots (when melted).  



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