The Mac @TheMac
29 June, 05:11
Sargon of Akkad (/ˈsɑːrɡɒn/; Akkadian: 𒊬𒊒𒄀 Šar-ru-gi),[3] also known as Sargon the Great,[4] was the first ruler of the Akkadian Empire, known for his conquests of the Sumerian city-states in the 24th to 23rd centuries BC.[2] He is sometimes identified as the first person in recorded history to rule over an empire.

Understanding of the Akkadian Empire continues to be hampered by the fact that its capital Akkad has not yet been located, despite numerous attempts.[17][18] Precise dating of archaeological sites is hindered by the fact that there are no clear distinctions between artifact assemblages thought to stem from the preceding Early Dynastic period, and those thought to be Akkadian. Likewise, material that is thought to be Akkadian continues to be in use into the Ur III period.

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The Mac @TheMac
29 June, 05:13
In response The Mac to his Publication
The Bible refers to Akkad in Genesis 10:10–12, which states:

"The beginning of his [Nimrod's] kingdom was Babel, and Erech, and Accad, and Calneh, in the land of Shinar. Out of that land he went forth into Assyria, and builded Nineveh, and Rehoboth-Ir, and Calah, and Resen between Nineveh and Calah (the same is the great city)."

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The Mac @TheMac
29 June, 05:15
In response The Mac to his Publication

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The Mac @TheMac
29 June, 05:17
In response The Mac to his Publication
The Tower of Babel (Hebrew: מִגְדַּל בָּבֶל‎‎, Migdal Bavel) narrative in Genesis 11:1–9 is an origin myth meant to explain why the world's peoples speak different languages.

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The Mac @TheMac
29 June, 05:19
In response The Mac to his Publication

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The Mac @TheMac
29 June, 05:36
In response The Mac to his Publication
Damnatio memoriae is a modern Latin phrase meaning "condemnation of memory", indicating that a person is to be excluded from official accounts. There are and have been many routes to damnatio memoriae, including the destruction of depictions, the removal of names from inscriptions and documents, and even large-scale rewritings of history. The term can be applied to other instances of official scrubbing; the practice is seen as long ago as the aftermath of the reign of the Egyptian Pharaohs Akhenaten in the 13th century BC, and Hatshepsut in the 14th century BC.

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The Mac @TheMac
29 June, 05:42
In response The Mac to his Publication

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The Mac @TheMac
29 June, 05:43
In response The Mac to his Publication

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The Mac @TheMac
29 June, 05:43
In response The Mac to his Publication

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The Mac @TheMac
29 June, 05:45
In response The Mac to his Publication

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The Mac @TheMac
29 June, 05:47
In response The Mac to his Publication
Tiaa or Tia'a (Ancient Egyptian: 𓍘𓉼𓁗 tjꜥꜣ) was an ancient Egyptian queen consort during the Eighteenth Dynasty of Egypt. She was the a "faceless concubine" during the time of Amenhotep II who withheld from her the title Great Royal Wife, but when her son Thutmose IV became pharaoh, he performed a revision of her status and gave her that title.[1][2]

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The Mac @TheMac
29 June, 05:49
In response The Mac to his Publication

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The Mac @TheMac
29 June, 05:53
In response The Mac to his Publication

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The Mac @TheMac
29 June, 05:55
In response The Mac to his Publication
Neithhotep's name is connected to Neith, the goddess of war and hunting. This followed a tradition notably practiced during the first dynasty: many queens (such as Merneith/Meritneith, another possible female pharaoh and descendant of Neithhotep) and princesses (such as Aha-Neith, Her-Neith, Nakht-Neith and Qa'-Neith) also had names referencing the deity.

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The Mac @TheMac
29 June, 05:59
In response The Mac to his Publication
Merneith (also written Merit-neith and Meryt-Neith) was a consort and a regent of Ancient Egypt during the First Dynasty. She may have been a ruler of Egypt in her own right, based on several official records. If this was the case and the earlier royal wife Neithhotep never ruled as an independent regent, Merneith may have been the first female pharaoh and the earliest queen regnant in recorded history. Her rule occurred around 2950 BC[1] for an undetermined period. Merneith’s name means "Beloved by Neith" and her stele contains symbols of that ancient Egyptian deity. She may have been Djer's daughter and was probably Djet's senior royal wife. The former meant that she would have been the great-granddaughter of unified Egypt's first pharaoh, Narmer. She was also the mother of Den,[2] her successor.

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The Mac @TheMac
29 June, 06:02
In response The Mac to his Publication
Ancient Akkadian cylinder seal depicting Inanna, the subject of many of Enheduanna's hymns, resting her foot on the back of a lion, c. 2334–2154 BC

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The Mac @TheMac
29 June, 06:04
In response The Mac to his Publication
Narmer (Ancient Egyptian: nꜥr-mr, meaning "painful," "stinging," "harsh," or "fierce catfish;"[1][2][3] r. c. 3273 – 2987 BC) was an ancient Egyptian pharaoh of the Early Dynastic Period.[4] He was the successor to the Protodynastic king Ka. Many scholars consider him the unifier of Egypt and founder of the First Dynasty, and in turn the first king of a unified Egypt. A majority of Egyptologists believe that Narmer was the same person as Menes.[a][6][7][8]

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The Mac @TheMac
29 June, 06:36
In response The Mac to his Publication

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The Mac @TheMac
29 June, 07:05
In response The Mac to his Publication
Dakhamunzu (sometimes Dahamunzu) is the name of an Egyptian queen known from the Hittite annals The Deeds of Suppiluliuma, which were composed by Suppiluliuma I's son Mursili II. The identity of this queen has not yet been established with any degree of certainty and Dakhamunzu has variously been identified as either Nefertiti, Meritaten or Ankhesenamen. The identification of this queen is of importance both for Egyptian chronology and for the reconstruction of events during the late Eighteenth Dynasty.

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The Mac @TheMac
29 June, 07:29
In response The Mac to his Publication
Narmer's identity is the subject of ongoing debates, although the dominant opinion among Egyptologists identifies Narmer with the pharaoh Menes, who is renowned in the ancient Egyptian written records as the first king, and the unifier of Ancient Egypt. Narmer's identification with Menes is based on the Narmer Palette (which shows Narmer as the unifier of Egypt) and the two necropolis seals from the Umm el-Qa'ab cemetery of Abydos that show him as the first king of the First Dynasty.

The date commonly given for the beginning of Narmer's reign is c. 3100 BC.[14][15] Other mainstream estimates, using both the historical method and radiocarbon dating, are in the range c. 3273–2987 BC.

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The Mac @TheMac
29 June, 07:32
In response The Mac to his Publication
The commonly-used name Menes derives from Manetho, an Egyptian historian and priest who lived during the pre-Coptic period of the Ptolemaic Kingdom. Manetho noted the name in Greek as Μήνης (transliterated: Mênês).[5][11] An alternative Greek form, Μιν (transliterated: Min), was cited by the fifth-century-BC historian Herodotus,[12] but is a variant no longer accepted; it appears to have been the result of contamination from the name of the god Min.[13]

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The Mac @TheMac
29 June, 07:37
In response The Mac to his Publication
Minoan civilization, Bronze Age civilization of Crete that flourished from about 3000 BCE to about 1100 BCE. Its name derives from Minos, either a dynastic title or the name of a particular ruler of Crete who has a place in Greek legend.

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The Mac @TheMac
29 June, 07:39
In response The Mac to his Publication
In light of excavations in Crete, many scholars consider that Minos was a royal or dynastic title for the priestly rulers of Bronze Age, or Minoan, Knossos.

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The Mac @TheMac
29 June, 07:40
In response The Mac to his Publication
Knossos
Κνωσός

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The Mac @TheMac
29 June, 07:41
In response The Mac to his Publication
Crete (Greek: Κρήτη, Modern: Kríti, Ancient: Krḗtē, [krέːtεː]) is the largest and most populous of the Greek islands, the 88th largest island in the world and the fifth largest island in the Mediterranean Sea, after Sicily, Sardinia, Cyprus, and Corsica. It bounds the southern border of the Aegean Sea. Crete rests approximately 160 km (99 mi) south of the Greek mainland. It has an area of 8,336 km2 (3,219 sq mi) and a coastline of 1,046 km (650 mi).

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The Mac @TheMac
29 June, 07:44
In response The Mac to his Publication

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The Mac @TheMac
29 June, 07:47
In response The Mac to his Publication
The Lion Gate, the main entrance of the citadel of Mycenae, 13th century BC

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The Mac @TheMac
29 June, 07:49
In response The Mac to his Publication

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The Mac @TheMac
29 June, 07:51
In response The Mac to his Publication
Founded
6th millennium BC
Abandoned
c. 1200 BC
Bronze Age
Cultures
Hittite

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The Mac @TheMac
29 June, 07:53
In response The Mac to his Publication
The origin of the name Magog is unclear. It may come from the Akkadian mat Gugi, "land of Gog", that is, the land of Gyges: Lydia.

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The Mac @TheMac
29 June, 07:56
In response The Mac to his Publication

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The Mac @TheMac
29 June, 08:01
In response The Mac to his Publication
Iry-Hor (or Ro[2]) was a predynastic pharaoh of Upper Egypt during the 32nd century BC.[1] Excavations at Abydos in the 1980s and 1990s[3][4][5] and the discovery in 2012 of an inscription of Iry-Hor in the Sinai confirmed his existence.[1] Iry-Hor is the earliest ruler of Egypt known by name and is sometimes cited as the earliest-living historical person known by name

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The Mac @TheMac
29 June, 10:49
In response The Mac to his Publication
Homer interchangeably used the ethnonyms Achaeans, Danaans, and Argives to refer to the besiegers,[18] and these names appear to have passed down from the time they were in use to the time when Homer applied them as collective terms in his Iliad.

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The Mac @TheMac
29 June, 10:50
In response The Mac to his Publication
Egyptian records mention a T(D)-n-j or Danaya (Tanaju) land for the first time c. 1437 BC, during the reign of Pharaoh Thutmoses III (r. 1479–1425 BC). This land is geographically defined in an inscription from the reign of Amenhotep III (r. circa 1390–1352 BC), where a number of Danaya cities are mentioned, which cover the largest part of southern mainland Greece.[22] Among them, cities such as Mycenae, Nauplion, and Thebes have been identified with certainty. Danaya has been equated with the ethnonym Danaoi (Greek: Δαναοί), the name of the mythical dynasty that ruled in the region of Argos, also used as an ethnonym for the Greek people by Homer.

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The Mac @TheMac
29 June, 10:51
In response The Mac to his Publication
The Tuath(a) Dé Danann (Irish: [t̪ˠuəhə dʲeː d̪ˠan̪ˠən̪ˠ], meaning "the folk of the goddess Danu"), also known by the earlier name Tuath Dé ("tribe of the gods"),[1] are a supernatural race in Irish mythology. They are thought to represent the main deities of pre-Christian Gaelic Ireland.[1] The Tuatha Dé Danann constitute a pantheon whose attributes appeared in a number of forms throughout the Celtic world.

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The Mac @TheMac
29 June, 10:54
In response The Mac to his Publication
Arcadia (Greek: Ἀρκαδία) is a region in the central Peloponnese. It takes its name from the mythological character Arcas, and in Greek mythology it was the home of the god Pan. In European Renaissance arts, Arcadia was celebrated as an unspoiled, harmonious wilderness; as such, it was referenced in popular culture.

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The Mac @TheMac
29 June, 10:56
In response The Mac to his Publication
Hera became jealous, and in anger, she transformed Callisto into a bear. She would have done the same or worse to her son, but Zeus hid Arcas in an area of Greece, which would come to be called Arcadia, in his honor. Arcas was given into a care of one of the Pleiades, Maia.

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The Mac @TheMac
29 June, 10:58
In response The Mac to his Publication
Maia (/ˈmeɪ.ə/; Ancient Greek: Μαῖα; Latin: Maia),[1] in ancient Greek religion, is one of the Pleiades and the mother of Hermes by Zeus.[2]

Maia is the daughter of Atlas[3] and Pleione the Oceanid,[4] and is the oldest of the seven Pleiades.[5] They were born on Mount Cyllene in Arcadia,[4] and are sometimes called mountain nymphs, oreads; Simonides of Ceos sang of "mountain Maia" (Maiados oureias) "of the lovely black eyes."[5] Because they were daughters of Atlas, they were also called the Atlantides.

Hermes and Maia, detail from an Attic red-figure amphora (c. 500 BC)

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The Mac @TheMac
29 June, 11:04
In response The Mac to his Publication
Arcas is the eponym of Arcadia, where Maia was born.[4] The story of Callisto and Arcas, like that of the Pleiades, is an aition for a stellar formation, the constellations Ursa Major and Ursa Minor, the Great and Little Bear.

Her name is related to μαῖα (maia), an honorific term for older women related to μήτηρ (mētēr) 'mother',[citation needed] also meaning "midwife" in Greek.

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The Mac @TheMac
29 June, 11:06
In response The Mac to his Publication
In ancient Roman religion and myth, Maia embodied the concept of growth,[10] as her name was thought to be related to the comparative adjective maius, maior "larger, greater". Originally, she may have been a homonym independent of the Greek Maia, whose myths she absorbed through the Hellenization of Latin literature and culture.

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The Mac @TheMac
29 June, 11:07
In response The Mac to his Publication
In an archaic Roman prayer,[12] Maia appears as an attribute of Vulcan, in an invocational list of male deities paired with female abstractions representing some aspect of their functionality. She was explicitly identified with Earth (Terra, the Roman counterpart of Gaia) and the Good Goddess (Bona Dea) in at least one tradition.[13][14] Her identity became theologically intertwined also with the goddesses Fauna, Ops, Juno, Carna, and the Magna Mater ("Great Goddess", referring to the Roman form of Cybele but also a cult title for Maia), as discussed at some length by the late antiquarian writer Macrobius.[15] This treatment was probably influencedby the 1st-century BC scholar Varro, who tended to resolve a great number of goddesses into one original "Terra".[14] The association with Juno, whose Etruscan counterpart was Uni, is suggested again by the inscription Uni Mae on the Piacenza Liver.[16]

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The Mac @TheMac
29 June, 11:08
In response The Mac to his Publication
The month of May (Latin Maius) was supposedly named for Maia, though ancient etymologists also connected it to the maiores "ancestors", again from the adjective maius, maior, meaning those who are "greater" in terms of generational precedence. On the first day of May, the Lares Praestites were honored as protectors of the city,[17] and the flamen of Vulcan sacrificed a pregnant sow to Maia, a customary offering to an earth goddess[18] that reiterates the link between Vulcan and Maia in the archaic prayer formula. In Roman myth, Mercury (Hermes), the son of Maia, was the father of the twin Lares, a genealogy that sheds light on the collocation of ceremonies on the Kalends of May.[19] On May 15, the Ides, Mercury was honored as a patron of merchants and increaser of profit (through an etymological connection with merx, merces, "goods, merchandise"), another possible connection with Maia his mother as a goddess who promoted growth.

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The Mac @TheMac
29 June, 11:11
In response The Mac to his Publication
Bona Dea (Latin: [ˈbɔna ˈdɛ.a]; 'Good Goddess') was a goddess in ancient Roman religion. She was associated with chastity[1][2] and fertility in Roman women, healing, and the protection of the state and people of Rome. According to Roman literary sources, she was brought from Magna Graecia at some time during the early or middle Republic, and was given her own state cult on the Aventine Hill.

Goddess of chastity and fertility in women, healing, and the protection of the state and people

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The Mac @TheMac
29 June, 11:21
In response The Mac to his Publication

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The Mac @TheMac
29 June, 11:22
In response The Mac to his Publication

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The Mac @TheMac
29 June, 11:24
In response The Mac to his Publication

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The Mac @TheMac
29 June, 11:26
In response The Mac to his Publication
One was held on May 1 at Bona Dea's Aventine temple. Its date connects her to Maia; its location connects her to Rome's plebeian commoner class, whose tribunes and emergent aristocracy resisted patrician claims to rightful religious and political dominance.

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The Mac @TheMac
29 June, 11:32
In response The Mac to his Publication

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The Mac @TheMac
29 June, 11:33
In response The Mac to his Publication
The best known modern May Day traditions, observed both in Europe and North America, include dancing around the maypole and crowning the Queen of May.

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The Mac @TheMac
29 June, 11:36
In response The Mac to his Publication

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The Mac @TheMac
29 June, 11:37
In response The Mac to his Publication

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The Mac @TheMac
29 June, 11:42
In response The Mac to his Publication
Maia bears the titles "wet nurse of the king", "educator of the god's body" and "great one of the harem". Her origin and relatives are not known. Apart from Tutankhamun, the Overseer of the Magazine Rahotep, the High Priest of Thoth, and scribes named Tetinefer and Ahmose are mentioned in inscriptions. Due to the close resemblance of Maia with Tutankhamun's sister Meritaten, it was suggested that the two are identical.

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The Mac @TheMac
29 June, 11:44
In response The Mac to his Publication

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The Mac @TheMac
29 June, 11:44
In response The Mac to his Publication

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The Mac @TheMac
29 June, 11:46
In response The Mac to his Publication
Self-reflection is the ability to witness and evaluate our own cognitive, emotional, and behavioural processes. In psychology, other terms used for this self-observation include 'reflective awareness', and 'reflective consciousness', which originate from the work of William James.

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The Mac @TheMac
29 June, 11:55
In response The Mac to his Publication
1 : an instance of reflecting especially : the return of light or sound waves from a surface. 2 : the production of an image by or as if by a mirror. 3a : the action of bending or folding back. b : a reflected part : fold.

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The Mac @TheMac
29 June, 11:58
In response The Mac to his Publication

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The Mac @TheMac
29 June, 11:59
In response The Mac to his Publication

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The Mac @TheMac
29 June, 12:00
In response The Mac to his Publication

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The Mac @TheMac
29 June, 12:00
In response The Mac to his Publication

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The Mac @TheMac
29 June, 12:00
In response The Mac to his Publication

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The Mac @TheMac
29 June, 12:02
In response The Mac to his Publication
https://anonup.com/thread/...

🙏🏻❤️🕊🕯

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The Mac @TheMac
29 June, 02:16
In response The Mac to his Publication
Have we cracked this code or what?

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The Mac @TheMac
29 June, 02:19
In response The Mac to his Publication

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The Mac @TheMac
29 June, 02:19
In response The Mac to his Publication

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The Mac @TheMac
29 June, 02:20
In response The Mac to his Publication

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The Mac @TheMac
29 June, 02:20
In response The Mac to his Publication
L O V E

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The Mac @TheMac
29 June, 02:21
In response The Mac to his Publication

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The Mac @TheMac
29 June, 02:22
In response The Mac to his Publication
B E L O V E D

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The Mac @TheMac
29 June, 02:22
In response The Mac to his Publication
D E C O D I N G

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The Mac @TheMac
29 June, 02:23
In response The Mac to his Publication
A DECODE

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The Mac @TheMac
29 June, 02:26
In response The Mac to his Publication
echoed

simple past tense and past participle of echo

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The Mac @TheMac
29 June, 02:28
In response The Mac to his Publication
smile radiantly.

"she beamed with pleasure"

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The Mac @TheMac
29 June, 02:30
In response The Mac to his Publication
Optical illusions, more appropriately known as visual illusions, involves visual deception. Due to the arrangement of images, the effect of colors, the impact of light source or other variables, a wide range of misleading visual effects can be seen. ... For some illusions, some people simply are not able to see the effect.

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The Mac @TheMac
29 June, 02:32
In response The Mac to his Publication
be under the illusion that

believe mistakenly that.

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The Mac @TheMac
29 June, 02:33
In response The Mac to his Publication
Maya, (Sanskrit: “magic” or “illusion”) a fundamental concept in Hindu philosophy, notably in the Advaita (Nondualist) school of Vedanta. Maya originally denoted the magic power with which a god can make human beings believe in what turns out to be an illusion.

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The Mac @TheMac
29 June, 02:38
In response The Mac to his Publication
delusional (plural delusionals)

A person suffering from a delusion.

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The Mac @TheMac
29 June, 02:40
In response The Mac to his Publication
ion pair:A pair of oppositely charged ions held together by Coulomb attraction without formation of a covalent bond. ...

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The Mac @TheMac
29 June, 02:41
In response The Mac to his Publication
"they taught me to have fun and loosen up"

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The Mac @TheMac
29 June, 02:43
In response The Mac to his Publication
let it all hang out

be very relaxed or uninhibited.

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The Mac @TheMac
29 June, 02:44
In response The Mac to his Publication
idiomatic) To deal with the minor consequences of a previous action; to tidy up, finish, or complete.
Removing her name from the mailing list was her way of tying up loose ends.

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The Mac @TheMac
29 June, 02:46
In response The Mac to his Publication
A CLEARING UP

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The Mac @TheMac
29 June, 02:47
In response The Mac to his Publication
MAKING EVERYTHING SAFE AND SOUND

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The Mac @TheMac
29 June, 02:48
In response The Mac to his Publication
say "Fe”

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The Mac @TheMac
29 June, 02:49
In response The Mac to his Publication
Ultra "sound”

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The Mac @TheMac
29 June, 02:51
In response The Mac to his Publication
Magnetomotive ultrasound imaging is an emerging technique where superparamagnetic iron oxide nanoparticles can be used as an ultrasound contrast agent

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The Mac @TheMac
29 June, 02:52
In response The Mac to his Publication
Contrast-enhanced ultrasound is the application of ultrasound contrast medium to traditional medical sonography. Ultrasound contrast agents rely on the different ways in which sound waves are reflected from interfaces between substances. This may be the surface of a small air bubble or a more complex structure

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The Mac @TheMac
29 June, 02:54
In response The Mac to his Publication

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The Mac @TheMac
29 June, 02:57
In response The Mac to his Publication

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The Mac @TheMac
29 June, 03:02
In response The Mac to his Publication

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The Mac @TheMac
29 June, 03:04
In response The Mac to his Publication
Hades ruled the Underworld in Greek Mythology and Osiris ruled the Underworld in Egyptian Mythology.

The biggest difference is that the death gods of Egypt were held in much higher esteem, being the most important gods other than the Sun God himself.

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The Mac @TheMac
29 June, 03:25
In response The Mac to his Publication
From Ancient Greek ᾍδης (Hā́idēs). Possibly Proto-Indo-European *n̥- (“not”) + *weyd- (“see”), meaning "that which is unseen",[1] equivalent to ἀ- (a-) + εἶδον (eîdon). Puhvel (1987) argues that it is from *Sm̥weyd-, from *sm̥- (compounding stem) + *weyd- (“see”), meaning "see-together" or "uniter", equivalent to ἁ- (ha-) + εἶδον (eîdon), cognate with Russian свида́ние (svidánije, “see each other”), and partly in Sanskrit saṁgamanam janānāṁ (ingatherer of people), where *weyd- is replaced with *gam-.

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The Mac @TheMac
29 June, 03:28
In response The Mac to his Publication
Alternative forms
Ἀΐδης (Aḯdēs) – Homeric
Ἀΐδᾱς (Aḯdās) – Doric
Ἀϊδωνεύς (Aïdōneús)
ᾈδωνεύς (Āidōneús)

Etymology
Perhaps from Proto-Indo-European *n̥- (“not”) + *weyd- (“see”), meaning "that which is unseen",[1] equivalent to ἀ- (a-) +‎ εἶδον (eîdon). Compare ἀϊδής (aïdḗs, “invisible”).

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The Mac @TheMac
29 June, 03:31
In response The Mac to his Publication
Woodhouse, S. C. (1910) English–Greek Dictionary: A Vocabulary of the Attic Language‎[1], London: Routledge & Kegan Paul Limited.
below idem, page 73.
death idem, page 198.
hades idem, page 380.
hell idem, page 395.
infernal idem, page 437.
lower idem, page 503.
nether idem, page 556.
shade idem, page 760.
under idem, page 912.
world idem, page 989.

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The Mac @TheMac
29 June, 03:34
In response The Mac to his Publication
beneath

1.
extending or directly underneath something.

underneath
below
further down
lower down
in a lower place

Opposite:
above

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The Mac @TheMac
29 June, 03:36
In response The Mac to his Publication
Neith /ˈniː.ɪθ/ (Koinē Greek: Νηΐθ, a borrowing of the Demotic form Ancient Egyptian: nt, likely originally to have been nrt "she is the terrifying one"; Coptic: ⲛⲏⲓⲧ[5];also spelled Nit, Net, or Neit) was an early ancient Egyptian deity. She was said to be the first and the prime creator, who created the universe and all it contains, and that she governs how it functions. She was the goddess of the cosmos, fate, wisdom, water, rivers, mothers, childbirth, hunting, weaving, and war.

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The Mac @TheMac
29 June, 03:39
In response The Mac to his Publication

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The Mac @TheMac
29 June, 03:40
In response The Mac to his Publication
Probably just a coincidence...

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The Mac @TheMac
29 June, 03:50
In response The Mac to his Publication

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The Mac @TheMac
29 June, 03:52
In response The Mac to his Publication

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The Mac @TheMac
29 June, 03:54
In response The Mac to his Publication

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Only people mentioned by TheMac in this post can reply
The Mac @TheMac
29 June, 04:01
In response The Mac to his Publication

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The Mac @TheMac
29 June, 04:01
In response The Mac to his Publication

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