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Updated: May 10, 2025
For drama means, etymologically, action and doing: and of the drama there are, and always will be, two kinds: one the representative, the other the actual; and for a world wherein there is no superabundance of good deeds, the latter will be always the better kind.
The term, which etymologically means 'wind, and in Gen. i. 2 and Isa. xl. 13 appears to be a fragment of a certain divine name, anciently appropriated to the Creator and Preserver of the world, was later employed for the God who is immanent in believers, and who is continually bringing them into conformity with the divine model.
Exactly to what class of deities she belonged, we are no longer able to say, but it is certain that at some time, probably about the time of Hammurabi, an amalgamation took place between her and another goddess known as Erua, a name that etymologically suggests the idea of 'begetting. She is represented as dwelling in the temple of E-Zida at Borsippa, and was originally the consort of Nabu, the chief god of this place.
* These words mean literally the Guests' Court or Yard. The Ghosti a word which is etymologically the same as our "host" and "guest" were originally the merchants who traded with other towns or other countries. In the other parts of the town the air of solitude and languor is still more conspicuous.
Some have regarded them as symbols of possession the word "possession" being supposed to be etymologically derived from the Latin words pedis positio, and meaning literally the position of the foot. The adage of the ancient jurists was, "Quicquid pes tuus calcaverit tuum erit."
But I could not help noticing that, although an invalid, I was a much better pedestrian than my companion, frequently leaving him behind, and that even as a "tramp," he was etymologically an impostor.
Maybe I had better explain that infare meant the bride's going home to her new house, or at least her new family. This etymologically the root is the Saxon faran, to go, whence come wayfaring, faring forth and so on. All this I am setting forth not in pedantry, but because so many folk had stared blankly upon hearing the word which was to me as familiar as word could be.
The seeming modesty of the title philosopher for etymologically it is a modest one, though it has managed to gather a very different signification with the lapse of time the modesty of the title would naturally appeal to a man who claimed so much ignorance, as Socrates; and Plato represents him as distinguishing between the lover of wisdom and the wise, on the ground that God alone may be called wise.
When, in a standard dictionary of the English language, I look out the word "virtue," which etymologically means "manliness" the manliness which would scorn to gratify its own selfish passions at the cost of the young, the poor, and the weak, at the cost of a woman I find one of its meanings defined, not as male but as "female chastity."
Of the goddesses, Frigga, wife of Odin, stands first, an august matron of mysterious knowledge, whom even gods consult, and by whom men swear; she has also to do with marriage, and the childless appeal to her. Etymologically she is scarcely to be distinguished from Freya, wife of Odur, who, however, is lighter in character, and is rather a goddess of love.
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