EmeraldHope
The Living Force
The word I am playing with today is Nephilim. I do not know any other languages other than English, so anyone with other languages that can add here would be encouraged to jump in.
The first thing I note is that the root word seems to nephros, Greek for kidney. The adrenals are on the kidney. That is connected to
norepenephrine and epinephrine which has a phonetic similarity.
Also, nephritis- which is kidney + infammation
I also think of Sets sister wife and Isis's sister Nepthys . She is connected to the bird of prey- the kite. :)
We also have the end of the word- ilim, which , i see phonetically as "ill I am", lol
Also conected to:
habiliment often habiliments, early 15c., "munitions, weapons," from M.Fr. habillement, from abiller "prepare or fit out," probably from habile "fit, suitable" (see able). Alternative etymology [Barnhart, Klein] makes the French verb originally mean "reduce a tree by stripping off the branches," from a- "to" + bille "stick of wood." Sense of "clothing, dress" developed late 15c., by association with habit[ (q.v.).
Kilimanjaro mountain in Africa, from Swahili, lit. "mountain of the god of cold," from kilima "mountain" + njaro "god of cold."
If I look at the whole word phonetically, I see " Knee fall ill I am"
That makes me think of falling to ones knees in prayer. Also reminds me of Masons kneeling on left bare knee.
The first thing I note is that the root word seems to nephros, Greek for kidney. The adrenals are on the kidney. That is connected to
norepenephrine and epinephrine which has a phonetic similarity.
Also, nephritis- which is kidney + infammation
I also think of Sets sister wife and Isis's sister Nepthys . She is connected to the bird of prey- the kite. :)
We also have the end of the word- ilim, which , i see phonetically as "ill I am", lol
Also conected to:
habiliment often habiliments, early 15c., "munitions, weapons," from M.Fr. habillement, from abiller "prepare or fit out," probably from habile "fit, suitable" (see able). Alternative etymology [Barnhart, Klein] makes the French verb originally mean "reduce a tree by stripping off the branches," from a- "to" + bille "stick of wood." Sense of "clothing, dress" developed late 15c., by association with habit[ (q.v.).
Kilimanjaro mountain in Africa, from Swahili, lit. "mountain of the god of cold," from kilima "mountain" + njaro "god of cold."
If I look at the whole word phonetically, I see " Knee fall ill I am"
That makes me think of falling to ones knees in prayer. Also reminds me of Masons kneeling on left bare knee.