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Hunting is not associated with veins. You fabricated that premise. Where is a link that supports this?
from French venaison, from Latin venan to hunt. venite /vi'naiti/ e- noun the 95th ... 17c: from Latin vena vein. vent1 e» noun a slit in a garment, ...
Ripped veins would create a hemmorage, not a bruise.
Everyone is still waiting for your link. Did you find it yet?
Originally posted by mendax78
Sure it does.
from French venaison, from Latin venan to hunt. venite /vi'naiti/ e- noun the 95th ... 17c: from Latin vena vein. vent1 e» noun a slit in a garment, ...
What link ? I have provided it, Vena, Venat, Venus.
You stated it does not come from those, I provided to you it does.
Nothing about bruising there. Any links to where it says that 'veant-' means 'bruising'?
Review time. YOU stated 'venat-' means 'bruise'. I sad it did not. Now where is the link to the evidence?
infomationhealth.blogspot.com...
DEFINITIONS Disseminated intravascular coagulation (DIC) is a state where a small blood clot clot-spread throughout the blood stream, causing blockage of small blood vessels and reducing the clotting factors needed to control bleeding.
Originally posted by mendax78
It's a meaning from veins.
Yes as creating something dark, like a bruise, it's what Vena, and venat means.
Then show me the link where it says 'venat-' means 'bruise'.
All the links you provided do not say 'venat-' means 'bruise', do you have one, yes or no?
Venat. 3. dark spots amidst snow, where the snow had dissolved, or docs not rest. T
Originally posted by mendax78
It means black like a bruise, it's what hunting means as a meaning.
Venat. 3. dark spots amidst snow, where the snow had dissolved, or docs not rest. T
Originally posted by mendax78
Here is an association
Source
Venat. 3. dark spots amidst snow, where the snow had dissolved, or docs not rest. T
Originally posted by mendax78
It may mean other things as well, as hunting it's what it means, a dark spot, a bruise, if a bruise is a dark spot, it is the notion to create darkness. This in turn is known from dark or black friday, the representation of Venus as dark.
Oh, hahahahah. No, you quoted an abbreviation and are trying to pretend it meant what you said.
Now, do you have a link that says 'venat-' means 'bruise', yes or no?
Originally posted by mendax78
I never stated it was used in the dictionary, I stated it was a meaning.
Venat means hunting, but hunting it's self is dark, as creating it, it's a meaning of the word that it is not into the dictionary, because venat comes from venus.
A 'meaning' by defintion should appear in a dictionary, otherwise it is not a 'meaning' but just your half-baked opinion
If that were the case and not just your assinine opinion then there would be some reference to it somewhere. Where is a link to this?
Originally posted by pepsi78
It's more like a synonym, Venat is like dark..
No it's what it is, from Vena, to create a black spot when hunting the animal.
Oh, now it is 'more like a synonym', well news flash genius, synonyms are in the dictionary too.
Originally posted by Sigismundus
reply to post by network dude
Hi Network Dude -
Yes indeed - It seems from the writings of certain "insiders", the figures of the androgynous 'god of Nature Wisdom' aka Baphomet (which is a Hebrew ATBASH Gemmatria Ciper (i.e. a letter for letter reversed Aleph-Beth) for the term SOPHYA (which is a Greek word) expressed in reversed Hebrew-Aramaic letters meaning, e.g. arcane wisdom or 'gnosis') and the 3 syncretistic triune (and united) fertility-gods 'Jahbulon' (Jahweh + Ba'al + [Am]on both occur in the highly 'occult' andd symbolic rights of the Masonic 33rd Degree - something that bothers alot of persons newly acquiring that dreaded degree - including the American 'founding father' George Washington !
Originally posted by mendax78
I stated from the start is not in the dictionary.
It is a meaning only in Latin..
Originally posted by AugustusMasonicus
Originally posted by mendax78
I stated from the start is not in the dictionary.
Which means it is fabricated.
Not it odes not. Otherwise there would be evidence of this. You have not presented any so it obviously is not true.
Originally posted by pepsi78
Not at all, it's what it means, but not in English, it's a Latin saying.