10 results for stemmed:latin

NotP Chapter 7: Session 781, June 28, 1976 language unstated God archaic tenses

That world has many languages. Physically you are like one country within your psyche, with a language of your own. People are always searching for master languages, or for one in particular out of which all others emerged. In a way, Latin is a master language. In the same manner people search for gods, or a God, out of which all psyches emerged. Here you are searching for the implied source, the unspoken, invisible “pause,” the inner organization that gives language or the self a vehicle of expression. Languages finally become archaic. Some words are entirely forgotten in one language, but spring up in altered form in another. All of the earth’s languages, however, are united because of characteristic pauses and hesitations upon which the different sounds ride.

Even the alterations of obvious pauses between languages make sense only because of an implied, unstated inner rhythm. The historic gods become equally archaic. Their differences are often obvious. When you are learning a language, great mystery seems involved. When you are learning about the nature of the psyche, an even greater aura of the unknown exists. The unknown portions of the psyche and its greater horizons, therefore, have often been perceived as gods or as the greater psyches out of which the self emerged — as for example Latin is a source for the Romance languages.

TPS3 Deleted Session November 26, 1975 heroic Latin Teresa Deus title

[...] They included a projection through the eastern wall of our living room, and a “visitor” who returned with her; the Latin title of a book; her awareness of a third eye; some material, with diagrams, of me as a monk who wrote manuscripts in an underground chamber that he later sealed; a vision of Seth in a brown robe, looking as I’ve painted him—but the brown robe was “too easy,” Jane said suspiciously. [...]

(She wrote down the “Latin” book title as best she could: Enada Inaventum [Deus ?].The E could possibly be either an I or an A. Then at 10:10 she told me the translation of the title would be Spiritual Adventures. [...]

[...] In 2003 a friend, Jeff, used a Latin dictionary to check her book title. [...]

TES9 Session 450 November 20, 1968 Pius Carl encyclopedia creaked guy

[...] It’s a Latin word—crontonomous (my phonetic interpretation), as applied to the inner minus spectrum. [...]

[...] It would seem to be in Latin. [...]

WTH Part Two: Chapter 14: August 7, 1984 booklet priest Joe Bumbalo burial

[...] In her day it had been printed in Latin on one page, with the English translation on the page opposite. [...]

TES9 Session 430 August 22, 1968 Emolene apple Spanish Frazer America

[...] As far as our accepted history goes, there wouldn’t have been any Spanish speaking colonies or groups in South America in the 1200’s. Latin America was opened up to Spanish settlement in the 1500’s, of course, after the voyage of Columbus in 1492...)

SS Part Two: Chapter 17: Session 568, February 22, 1971 Speakers devil evil soul religions

[...] There are many manuscripts still not discovered, from old monasteries particularly in Spain, that tell of underground groups within religious orders who kept these secrets alive when other monks were copying old Latin manuscripts.

TES8 Session 410 May 8, 1968 cone postulated alkaloids photograph drugs

[...] Some of these, long in use in Latin America, stimulate fantasies of a specific type.”

UR2 Section 5: Session 723 December 2, 1974 language rock sounds Neanderthal prehuman

10. Such languages would be Italian, Spanish, French, and others stemming from Vulgar Latin.

ECS3 ESP Class Session, May 18, 1971 Gert dandy Ron Richelieu Janice

[...] You were eloquent in French and in Latin. [...]

TES2 Session 54 May 18, 1964 entities forest extral chicken durability

[...] Jane speculated that since she had studied Latin in high school Seth might have used her own subconscious knowledge to coin a new word.