Keys of the Crypt: Carolus Eadpeard Hinkelus Secundus (Pullus, Henkel, Capulus) Charles Edward Hinkel the Second.
We have tweaked the alphabet, (abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz) to fit our name. We also tweaked the numeral system, (1234567890) to fit o our dynamic name’s initials, (cesphccehts) as well.
Hunterian transliteration
Pinyin
The very first recorded English word (450 ad). It is one word even though it has three parts: “gægogæ mæga medu,”
The naming of Italy, Hispanic, Mexico, Portugal, France.
Classified information in the United States
All Stock exchanges
All buildings; structures worldwide.
All mountain ranges,
All geographic classifications. All Nations, all currencies, All cities, counties etc. All Languages.
All governments (public and private), so on, and on, and on.
Onomastics.
All things in the universe. Questionably the multiversity, as well. Every single word/quote/sentence/location listed/unlisted spells out our name:
We’ll call “Carolus Eadpeard Hinkelus Secundus (Pullus, Henkel, Capulus) Charles Edward Hinkel the Second” are our dynamic name. Sometimes it’s only Carolus Eadpeard Secundo. Sometimes it’s only “Charles Edward Hinkel the Second” Sometimes, it’s the initials of these names. Diminutives, and any literary relation to those names also applies also as the key to “unsealing our destiny”.
Livy wrote Ab Urbe Condita in the late 1st century BCE and early 1st century CE; Book 29 is generally dated to around 27–25 BCE.
First recorded use of the word : “Hispania”:
“Eadem aestate in Hispania coortum ingens bellum, conciente Ilergete Indibili; nulla alia de causa quam per admirationem Scipionis, contemptu imperatorum aliorum, orto: eum superesse unum ducem Romanis ceteris ab Hannibale interfectis.”
At 39 years of age, I had three things revealed (for lack of a better word)
The term “united” first appears in Richard Huloet’s Abecedarium Anglo-Latinum from 1552. The first complete sentence using the term is:
“The people are united in one body.”
Old Glory
America
The Hope Diamond
Many years ago (1997 – 1998 approximately), we dated a girl, she was a year younger than us and they told us, “You’re the one”. It is only about a few years ago (2019), that we had the revelation of what they meant. Seven years to be exact. So, yes I knew nothing of our identity & purpose of life until 2019. It all started as we sat on the john, and we began to question if there is some kind of connection between the State of Delaware and my identity. So, I called the statehouse of Delaware simply to ask if there is some kind of connection. They were closed for the holiday.
Then, in 2019 our mother purchased Ancestry DNA’s kit and we began to embark upon the awesome journey of indentity. During the summer of 2020 we went swimming at our father’s place. Bored, we opened our wallet and perused through the contents. Looking at a 1 dollar bill we questioned what the Latin parts are upon the Great Seal. Then a minute or two later we looked at the words, “The United States of America”. Having never been called Edward, and it’s dimmunitive Ted, I was in for a surprise. We thought, maybe, just maybe the word “United” stands for “1” “Ted”. Later, we were at Grandma’s house, and out of our mouth came the words, “We’re the Hope Diamond”. “Why does that keep happening?”, we thought. Okay, yeah, whatever… we blew it off. Then as we are walking into the Long John Silver’s restuarant alone, we said, “We’re Old Glory”. Sitting in the psych ward for the umpteenth time, we spoke from our mouth, “The “C” and the “A” in “America” are from our name, “Charles”.
Finally a while later I look back into money. The word “dollar” comes from a city in Bohemia. “Sankt Joachimsthal” to be exact. We thought, if we rearrange the letters, they will spell out my name…AND IT DID! Then, we look up the wealthiest company ever and find that the “Dutch East India Company” acrostically (cryptologically) spells out our name in the Dutch language.
Looking into a German map maker name “Martin Waldseemuller” we found the origin of “America”. Hearing voices, they say, “you’re “America””.
My name cryptologically spells out letter for letter (The United States of America). I’m going to share a list. Everything listed spells out our name, (sometimes duplication is needed). Let’s begin.
New Amsterdam, New York City (combine the two and you can spell out our dynamic name).
Earliest word-form of “France”: Latin Francia (7th–8th century)
Earliest clear full sentence:
“Pippinus rex Francorum in Francia regnavit.” (c. 8th century)
Cicero (Philippics, 44–43 BC):
“Italia cuncta ardet.”
(“All Italy is ablaze.”)
This is one of the earliest concise, fully preserved Latin sentences using “Italia”.
The very first recorded English word (450 ad). It is one word even though there are spaces: gaegogae maga medu,”
One through Thirteen (many languages)
20 (with Katy, various languages)
Books of the bible/and Koran)
Days of the week
Months
Global regions
Astrological signs
Tarot
Seven seas
Planets
haplogroup
Ouro boros
Apsu
Garden of Eden
Mesopotamia
funeral
Honorary pallbearer
Imperator Universi
Skateboard
Primary Interstate highways of Ohio (Ellia and I)
Retrograde
“Tomania” corresponds with
“Beatlemania”
(Drop the “t” in “beatlemania”)
(First letters; Init.) ☆List if twp.’s in Stark Co.
☆Ohio Rivers
Primary highways of Ohio
List of Ohio universities (1st init.)
List of Ohio radio stations (-W’s)
Radio station call letters.
Cehsphccehts
Kehp
Cehsphccehts
11-o’s
7-t’s
- w’s
Henophrenia
(TELEPHONE)
(Henophrenia)
Phone Henrie
Phone (“Hand” or “Hang”)
☆Henrie (“Hand” or “hang”)
☆Henry “the Fowler”?
“Square root”
Foil Method
Pi
Epidemiological method
☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆Katheryn Elizabeth Perry Hudson
☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆
The International Brain Mapping and Intraoperative Surgical Planning Society
American Brain Coalition
Gold
ChannelCall signNetworkOwnerDigital subchannel(s)Akron49WEAOPBSWestern Reserve Public Media
- 49.2: Fusion (inc. Ohio Channel)
- 49.3: FNX
Athens20WOUB-TVPBSOhio University - 20.2: Encore
- 20.3: World Channel
- 20.4: Create
- 20.5: Ohio Channel
- 20.6: PBS Kids
Bowling Green27WBGU-TVPBSBowling Green State University - 27.2: PBS Kids/Encore/Ohio Channel
- 27.3: Create
Cambridge44WOUC-TVPBSOhio University - 44.2: PBS Encore
- 44.3: World Channel
- 44.4: Create
- 44.5: Ohio Channel
- 44.6: PBS Kids
Canton47WRLMTCTTri-State Christian Television—Cincinnati5WLWTNBCHearst Television - 5.2: MeTV
- 5.3: Story Television
- 5.5: Get
Cincinnati9WCPO-TVABCE. W. Scripps Company - 9.2: Court TV
- 9.3: Bounce TV
- 9.4: Ion
- 9.5: Laff
- 9.6: Scripps News
- 9.7: HSN
Cincinnati12WKRC-TVCBS
Canton area codes
Compass rose
NW, NE, SE, SW
Ohio radio broadcast stations
Ohio Universities
Names of Ohio
Rivers
First letters of States, state capitals, and Potuses.
Administrative districts: (Buroughs districts) City, county, states (provinces) (adding up) of most if not all major (and minor) locations globally.
Nightclub
Cameras
Computer parts, computer companies.
Every company on earth.
All plants, animals, and minerals.
All school subjects, anywhere on earth.
glandula vestibularis minor
(Squirter)
China National Aero-Technology Import & Export Corporation
Drone
Business
University.
Guitar
Chordophone
Verizon
Seven Seas.
Mythologies
Conumdrum
Theory of Everything
Public-Safety Communications Officials(APCO) Project 14 Aural Brevity Code
Wikipedia
Midwest
Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Kansas, Michigan, Minnesota, Missouri, Nebraska, North Dakota, Ohio, South Dakota, and Wisconsin
“Preamble of the Constitution of the United States” (Minus: 29 t’s, 26o’s) 3x
☆Cehs phc Cehts
☆Cehs phc cehts
☆Cehs phc cehts
27 E.U. member states: (3x);
Austria, Belgium, Bulgaria, Croatia, Cyprus, Czech Republic, Denmark, Estonia, Finland, France, Germany, Greece, Hungary, Ireland, Italy, Latvia, Lithuania, Luxembourg, Malta, Netherlands, Poland, Portugal, Romania, Slovakia, Slovenia, Spain, Sweden
Aries, Taurus, Gemini, Cancer, Leo, Virgo, Libra, Scorpio, Sagittarius, Capricorn, Aquaris, Pisces
Christianity
Tarot cards
Playboy
☆Teddy☆
Pornography
Justice
Taps:
G, B, D, E, G, B, D, E, C, B, A, G, E, C, B, A, G
Alabama, Alaska, Arizona, Kansas, California, Colorado, Connecticut, Delaware, Florida, Georgia, Hawaii, Idaho, Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Kansas, Kentucky, Louisiana, Maine, Maryland, Massachusetts, Michigan, Minnesota, Mississippi, Missouri, Montana, Nebraska, Nevada, New Hampshire, New Jersey, New Mexico, New York, North Carolina, North Dakota, Ohio, Oklahoma, Oregon, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, South Carolina, South Dakota, Tennessee, Texas, Utah, Vermont, Virginia, Washington, West Virginia, Wisconsin, Wyoming
Burroughs of “The City”: Camden, Greenwich, Hackney, Hammersmith and Fulham, Islington, Kensington and Chelsea, Lambeth, Lewisham, Southwark, Tower Hamlets, Wandsworth and Westminster
(2x)
“The Star-Spangled Banner”
“O say can you see, by the dawn’s early light,
What so proudly we hailed at the twilight’s last gleaming,
Whose broad stripes and bright stars through the perilous fight,
O’er the ramparts we watched, were so gallantly streaming?
And the rocket’s red glare, the bombs bursting in air,
Gave proof through the night that our flag was still there;
O say does that star-spangled banner yet wave
O’er the land of the free and the home of the brave?
Badgec [(b.)c.]
4 / 21 / 753 b.c.
Edward (II)
Pledges of Allegiance all 50 states.
Musical notes of many songs, including National Anthem, Stairway To Heaven, Taps
1980 + 131+334
465
1981+100
April 10th, 1981
1981.2739726027
[(11/30/1979, 9:32:14 a.m.)
723,530.397250476190476 days > 0 b.c.]
723,530.397250476190476 days >0
723,530.397250476190476>0 b.c.
(“Charles Edward Hinkel Second”)
Mary had a little lamb
National anthem
UN Anthem
Amazing Grace
Beethovens 5th
Taps
Stairway To Heaven
- F – F – A – F – D – C
- F – F – A – F – D – C
- F – F – A – F – D – C
- A – A – G – F – E – D
- Chorus:
- C – C – C – D – E – F
- F – E – D – C – C – C
- C – C – C – D – E – F
- F – E – D – C
We Are the World
the key of A major:
- “We are the world”: A – C# – B – A
- “We are the children”: A – C# – B – A
- “We are the ones who make a brighter day”: A – C# – B – A – F# – E
- “So let’s start giving”: A – C# – B – A – F# – E
This is a simplified
Seikilos Epitaph
-
- A – B – C – D – E – C – B – A
- A – B – C – D – E – C – B – A
- C – D – E – D – C – B – A
- A – B – C – D – E – C – B – A
Handel’s Messiah:
Pink Floyd’s “Mother”
Individually 50 states
City of Canton, Stark county, State of Ohio, United States of America
Plate tectonics
Artem
Art
7 emirates of UAE
6 question words
Computer kingdom
Animal, plant, mineral as well.
]Star
Secundus
Eloheynu melech ha’olam
(Our God, King of the Universe)
All 14 Ohio area codes:
Baf ddo cco dcf bcd gdo bbo fad cho icg cbf eac dai efg bhc
Cologne water (1814), loan-translation of French eau de Cologne
Cologne
United
Atom
Alphabet
Wanted
1 time
(Proton neutron electron)
Nucleus
Fame
Area codes of Mexico (K+I)
55, 56, 427, 588, 591, 592, 593, 594, 595, 596, 597, 599, 711, 712, 713, 714, 716, 717, 718, 719, 721, 722, 723, 724, 725, 726, 728, 729, 743, 751, 761, 767
Brain
cytosine, adenine, guanine, thymine
Dutch West India Company
(Dutch: Geoctrooieerde Westindische Compagnie)
☆Owned New Amsterdam☆
Higgs Boson
God Particle;
Mean lifetime1.56×10−22 s[b] (predicted)
1.2 ~ 4.6×10−22 s (tentatively measured at 3.2 sigma (1 in 1000) significance)[3][4]
The expression “1.2 ~ 4.6×10−22 s” can be spelled out as:
“One point two is approximately four point six times ten to the power of negative twenty-two seconds”
Cehscehts
First Law of Thermal Dynamics:
(ΔU = Q – W)
Delta U equals Q minus W
Nuclear fusion reaction:
Lithium-6 plus Deuterium produces two Helium-4 nuclei
Iesus Nazarenus, Rex Iudaeorum
Six molecules carbon dioxide plus six molecules water yield one molecule glucose six molecules oxygen
Seinte Katerine, Seinte Margarete, Seinte Iuliene, Hali Meiðhad, and Sawles Warde.
1225, manuscript: “Ancrene Riwle” contained within
First known use of the word “gay”.
Vedas
Upanishads
Mahabharata
Ramayana
Bhagavata Purana
Yajnavalkya Smriti
Purana
Naalayira Divya Prabandham
☆INTRODUCTION TO COSMOGRAPHY
WITH CERTAIN PRINCIPLES OF GEOMETRY AND
ASTRONOMY NECESSARY FOR THIS MATTER
☆ADDITIONALLY, THE FOUR VOYAGES OF
AMERIGO VESPUCCI
☆A Represent-ation of the Entire World, both in the Solid and Pro-jected on the Plane, Including also lands which were Unknown to Ptolemy, and have been Recently Discovered
☆Cosmographiae introductio cum quibusdam geometriae ac astronomiae principiis ad eam rem necessariis. ☆Insuper quatuor Americi Vespucii navigationes. ☆Universalis Cosmographiae descriptio tam in solido quam plano, eis etiam insertis, quae Ptholomaeo ignota a nuperis reperta sunt
Wtc:
Charles E. Henkel Second
Microchip
Kalachakra
-81.430375. 40.810248
(T?) The Pentagon
Commodore PET TRS-80Apple II
6,636,360 (sq. ft.)
Area of Pentagon
Indianapolis
Motorcade
National Association of Professional Base Ball Players
Planets:
Mars, Mercury, Earth, Venus, Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, Neptune
11/30/1979:
XI/XXX/MCMLXXIX
(Charles Edward Second)
Natal Birth Chart:
7° 47° G dg
26° 49° Bf di
19° 45° Ai de
2° 29° B bi
4° 34° D cd
9° 10° I ao
25° 46° Be df
22° 18° Bb ah
19° 44° Ai dd
20° 54° Bo ed
3° 33° C cc
15° 16° Ae ef
10° 17° Ao ag
22° 17° Bb ag
13° 26° Ac bf
3° 15° C ae
27° 27° Bg bg
CESPHCCEHS
Eridu, Tell abu shahrain,
Dhi qar governorate, republic of iraq
King of Romance
City
National security
Olympic games
Apartment house
Vision
(First name middle name last name)
Cultus unius
Issue
Decompartmentalization
Slumber Party
Pi
3.14
Mathematics
General relativity
Transcendentalism
Romanize
Italy
A.U.C.
Ab Urbe Condita
753 b.c.
Octavian becomes first person to have Roman Numeral “II” (unless I was). It was first printed on a coin in the year 2 b.c. or 751 a.u.c.
21 April 753 BC
II Roman
Hinkel German
Edward English
Charles French
Ted Greek
Parts of spiritual heritage, genetics, mind, soul, God hood, education, etc. stem from various parts of the world at various times, consumating, thus to me.
Decompartmentalizing all of the pertinent knowledge, characteristics and reasoning, necessary for me to be, is essential. To be One. One with the universe.
Japanese days of the week. As well as others’ days, months etc. Literature of all major religions, Katy and Me. Numbers 1 through 20, Katy and Me. List of President’s names. State names and capitals, also. List of rivers in a given jurisdiction, such as Stark county. List of Universities and colleges in Ohio. List of call letters of Ohio radio stations. The Interstate Highways(?). Any or all major languages. Police codes. Every government department or office world wide. Every business worldwide. All signs (traffic (highway) and otherwise). awesomeness etched in stone since 1782.
New York City
New York
Yi- (ancient Chinese)-
“One”
Yi qi(dinosaur) ☆Secundo☆
Qi- (ancient Chinese)-“Vital Life Energy”
Musée du Louvre
Giza
Great Pyramid
Grant
Scholar
“Job” from
jobbe of worke
Throne
America the Beautiful
C C E C G A G F F E C D C C C E C G A G F F E C D C
UN Flag
Finance
Upside-down
Ameru nero
Silver ring thing
Gay
Record
Kosher
“And they lived happily ever after”
Carpet
Dictionary
-
- (Mickey Mouse Club theme song:)
- Now it’s time to say goodbye to all our company.
M-I-C
See you real soon!
K-E-Y
Why? Because we like you!
M-O-U-S-E
Academy of Music (New York City)
- Astor Opera House
- Bronx Opera House
- Century Theatre (Central Park West)
- David H. Koch Theater
- Hammerstein Ballroom
- Harlem Opera House
- Manhattan Center
- Metropolitan Opera
- Metropolitan Opera House (39th Street)
- Metropolitan Opera House (Lincoln Center)
- Palmo’s Opera House
- Perelman Performing Arts Center
- Studio 54
Cehsphccehts
Cehsphccehts
Metropolitan Opera House (39th Street)
Metropolitan Opera House (Lincoln Center)
pH
(potential of hydrogen)
Mathematical equation expressing the circular motion of a typhoon:
“Centripetal force equals mass multiplied by the square of tangential velocity divided by radius.”
Cehsphccehts
7 t’s
To Perry High thy honored name
brings loyalty and cherished fame.
Tears may fall and memories fade
but friendships true will long remain.
For the knowledge that you gave,
the path of life has brightly made
Raise in chorus loud and clear,
to Alma Mater, Oh, So, Dear!
“Coriolis force equals negative two times mass times the cross product of Earth’s angular velocity and the object’s velocity.”
Under the radar
MkUltra
Mk:
Office of Technical Service
(Ultra)
Teatro alla Scala
Moscow Bolshoi Theatre
head, neck, torso, arms, legs, hands,
Left atrium, left ventricle, right atrium, right ventricle
Appendicular skeleton
Bones
Cets
GABA
“carbon four, hydrogen nine, nitrogen one, oxygen two”
CESCEHTS
SLM
Les
Bhagavata Purana
Yajnavalkya Smriti
Sanskrit
Atharvaveda
5D optical data storage
Bitcoin: a peer-to-peer electronic cash system
Bitcoin
Money
Cash
Dollar
Bill (pullus, chicken)
afford
Huizi
Croeseid
Kroiseioi stateres
(Karolus Eadpeard Secundo)
Artist
Ars
Mdvl Germany
Kunst
“Occident” The Horse in Motion
Eadweard Muybridge
Grandaddy of the universe
Cosmic egg
—‐——————–
Excuse me
Pardon me
Mandelbrot set:
“f of c of z equals z squared plus c.”
Columbia, Challenger, Discovery, Atlantis
Primary + secondary colors: “Orange green purple red blue yellow”
soccer, basketball, baseball, cricket, tennis, American football
Octavian
(Romance) first use of “foteballe”
Cars, Frozen, Tangled, Moana, Elemental, Riyah, etc. All inadvertantly named by me.
“Ellipsis once upon a time”
television-camera
Photography Techniques
Mother Right: An Investigation of the Religious and Juridical Character of Matriarchy in the Ancient World
Sexual attraction
1,60,60,24,365,10,100,1000
Millennium
Cehs
11 30 1979
1,979
- 1,111
868
☆Pangaea☆
in Alfred Wagener’s
“Die Entstehung der Kontinente und Ozeane” (Deutsch, 1920)
ǵʰu-tó-m
Megiddo church
Busy
Shekinah glory
Motto: لَا إِلهَ إِلَّا اللَّهُ، مُحَمَّدٌ رَسُولُ اللَّهِ (Arabic)
Lā ʾilāha ʾillā llāh, Muhammadun rasūlu llāh
Carlus Eadpeard II
Charles Edward Second
“There is no god but God; Muhammad is the messenger of God.” (Shahada)
☆Aghganastan☆
Right on the money
☆South Seas Co.
☆Geoctrooieerde Westindische Compagnie
☆Vereenigde Oostindische Compagnie
☆Virginia Co.
☆Royal African Co.
☆Compagnie des Indes Occidentales
☆Asiento de Negros
☆Dansk Vestindisk Kompagni
☆East India Company ☆Qafā’il Tajariyya
☆Al-Tujjar
Winner take all
Chuckt
Preamble to the United States of America Constitution: Nouns capitalized letters, 16x:
WPUSOUJTWBLPCUSA
(Charles-Edward Second)
We the People of the United States, in Order to form a more perfect Union, establish Justice, ensure domestic Tranquility, provide for the common defence, promote the general Welfare, and secure the Blessings of Liberty to ourselves and our Posterity, do ordain and establish this Constitution for the United States of America.[3]
Most ancient Greeks recognized the twelve major Olympian gods and goddesses: (Zeus, Hera, Poseidon, Demeter, Athena, Ares, Aphrodite, Apollo, Artemis, Hephaestus, Hermes, Dionysus)
Confusion de Confusiones [1688]: Portions Descriptive of the Amsterdam Stock Exchange
“The Bourse”: -“the Mother of All Stock Markets.”
Enigmatic Book of the Netherworld
Fur Elise
aeiouy
“The Sibel War”
(Cehsphccehts
Cehsphccehts
Cehsphccehts)
- Allen Theatre
- Connor Palace
- Hanna Theatre
- The Helen Rosenfeld Lewis Bialosky Lab Theatre
- Kennedy’s Cabaret
- KeyBank State Theatre
- Mimi Ohio Theatre
- Outcalt Theatre
- Upper Allen
- Westfield Studio Theatre
Swiss banking
Notes for “Imagine” by John Lennon
Matt: 3:15 First red lettering,
“Suffer it to be so now: for thus it becometh us to fulfil all righteousness”
Mosfet
Same
War of 1812
Old Latin:
ABCDEFGHIKLMNOPQRSTVX
Dies Natalis Solis Invicti
Sol invitcus
Top 10 most spoken lang-uages:
- English
- Mandarin Chinese
- Hindi
- Spanish
- French
- Arabic
- Bengali
- Portuguese
- Russian
- Urdu
(CESPHCCEHTS)
- Top ten currencies:
- Kuwaiti Dinar
- Bahraini Dinar
- Omani Rial
- Jordanian Dinar
- British Pound Sterling
- Gibraltar Pound
- Swiss Franc
- Cayman Islands Dollar
- Euro
- United States Dollar
Cehsphccehts
Cehsphccehts
Paris France list of Caberets:
- Moulin Rouge
- Crazy Horse
- Paradis Latin
- La Nouvelle Eve
- Cabaret Burlesque
- Le Lapin Agile
- Au Lapin Agile
- Cabaret Oh! César
- Lido de Paris (closed as of September 2022)
The casinos in Atlantic City include Bally’s Atlantic City, Borgata Hotel Casino & Spa, Caesars Atlantic City, Golden Nugget Atlantic City, Hard Rock Hotel & Casino, Harrah’s Resort Atlantic City, Ocean Casino Resort, Resorts Casino Hotel, and Tropicana Casino & Resort.
Global atmospheric electrical circuit
Ælfric’s Homily on Nativity of Christ.
My, mine
Retrocausality
1400’s “hand”, Geoffrey Chaucer.
Perfume
Cologne
Clive Christian No. 1 Imperial Majesty
Ever
(CEHS)
“In the history of the world” (Charles Edward Hinkel the Second)
‘Of all time”
(CESPHCCEHII)
“In human history”
(Carolus Eadpeard II)
“-or”
Pennsylvania Dutch
Pennsilfaanisch-Deitsch
Pennsilfaanisch
the Five Families:
Bonanno, Colombo, Gambino, Genovese, Lucchese
Maranzano Profaci Mangano Luciano Gagliano
capo di tutti i capi
Space Centers in the USA: (3x)
Ames Research Center, Armstrong Flight Research Center, Glenn Research Center, Goddard Space Flight Center, Jet Propulsion Laboratory, Johnson Space Center, Kennedy Space Center, Langley Research Center, Marshall Space Flight Center, Stennis Space Center
Boy scouts
☆Mother, Father, Sister, Brother, grandmother, grandfather, aunt, uncle, cousin☆
North, South, east West
Up down left right
Satellites
Father Christmas
- Pan
- Tilt
- Push in
- Pull Out
- Zoom
- Dolly Zoom
- Roll
- Tracking
- Arc
- Boom
- Handheld
- Bird’s Eye
“church”
Cehii
Loop-hole
Freshman sophomore junior senior
Air Traffic Management System
Charles Edward Hinkel II
(Carolus Eadpeard Secundo)
Charles Edward Hinkel he Second
(Carolus Eadpeard Hinkelus Secundus)
“A drop in the bucket”
New york city Philadelphia Washigton District of columbia
Atom bomb
Audawarduz
Air consists of nitrogen (about 78%), oxygen (around 21%), and argon (approximately 0.93%). It also contains trace amounts of other gases like carbon dioxide, neon, and hydrogen.
(Wild turkey)
Meleagris gallopavo
Mother nature,
Father Time
Mile high club
Non-traditional lines of communication
Ohio has four international airports: Cleveland Hopkins International Airport, John Glenn Columbus International Airport, Dayton International Airport, and Rickenbacker International Airport. Additionally, Cincinnati is served by the Cincinnati/Northern Kentucky International Airport, which is located in Kentucky.
4 major Regions of the human brain:
cerebrum, cerebellum, diencephalon, brain stem
Metaphysical Lines of Communication
Edward
Dnoces eht leknih drawde selrahc
Non sunt in celi
quia fuccant uuiuys of heli
They are not in heaven because they fuck the wives of Ely
If I can not influence the gods, I shall move all Hell. (-Virgil).
sight, hearing, touch, smell, taste.
(The 4 dimensions)-
Legth width height time
integumentary, skeletal, muscular, nervous, endocrine, cardiovascular, lymphatic, respiratory, digestive, urinary, reproductive
(cescehts x 2)
Dante quoting Virgil:
tu se’ solo colui da cu’io tolsi / lo bello stile che m’ha fatto onore
Dead sea scrolls
Capital stock
Stock
Share
goalkeeper, defenders (including center-backs, full-backs, and wing-backs), midfielders (such as central midfielders and wingers), and forwards (including strikers and center-forwards
goalie, center, left wing, right wing, left defenseman, and right defenseman
Cricket fielding positions:
Wicketkeeper, Slip, Gully, Point, Cover, Mid-Off, Mid-On, Mid-Wicket, Square Leg, and Fine Leg
Rugby union positions:
props, hooker, locks, flankers, number 8, scrum-half, fly-half, centres, wings, full-back
First telegraph:
What hath God wrought?
(No. 23, 23)
First text message:
Merry Christmas
First american grocery store, 1916:
Piggy wiggly
First bumper sticker: “I like Ike”
The first known printed t-shirt featured the logo for the
“Air Corps Gunnery School”
First dot matrix line printed: “The quick brown fox jumps over the lazy dog”.
The first watch company in America (1850) was the:
Waltham Watch Company
often considered to be John D. Rockefeller, Andrew Carnegie, J.P. Morgan, Cornelius Vanderbilt, and Henry Ford
First cotton plantation in America:
Merry experiment
First baseball bat, future “Louisville Slugger”:
“Falls City Slugger”
First American bar:
White horse tavern
☆(Elwood Haynes) America’s first car, 1894▪︎
▪︎”Pioneer”☆
1st YouTube video:
“Me at the zoo”
The very first tweet, “just setting up my twttr”, was made by Jack Dorsey in 2006
Alva J. Fisher is often credited with creating the first electric washing machine, known as the Thor, in 1901.
The first Wikipedia article ever created was the “HomePage,” which was edited on January 15, 2001, with the text “This is the new WikiPedia!”
First words spoken over radio: “One, two, three, four, is it snowing where you are Mr. Thiessen?”
The first photograph taken by Joseph Nicéphore Niépce is called “View from the Window at Le Gras.” It was created between 1826 and 1827 and is considered the oldest surviving photograph.
The first television sitcom was “Pinwright’s Progress,” which aired on the BBC in 1946. The first American sitcom was “Mary Kay and Johnny,” which premiered in 1947.
First radio ad:
First website:
http://info.cern.ch
Inch foot yard mile
french english dutch roman
The very first newspaper, known as “Relation aller Fürnemmen und gedenckenwürdigen Historien,” was published in 1605 in Strasbourg. The headline of this groundbreaking publication translates to “Account of All Distinguished and Commemorable Stories.”
The very first magazine is considered to be the “Erbauliche Monaths-Unterredungen” (Edifying Monthly Discussions), published in Germany from 1663 to 1668. However, the first magazine that called itself a magazine was “The Gentleman’s Magazine,” first published in January 1731, which included various articles and discussions of the time.
The first movie is often considered to be “Roundhay Garden Scene,” filmed in 1888 by Louis Le Prince, which is a short clip showing people in a garden. However, the definition of the “first movie” can vary, with other contenders like “The Horse in Motion” (1878) and the Lumière brothers’ films from 1895 also being significant in film history.
G1:1, “In the beginning, God created the heavens and the earth.”
The oldest known board game is believed to be Senet, which dates back to around 3100 BC in ancient Egypt. However, the Royal Game of Ur, originating around 2600 BC in Mesopotamia
Theoretically
Parallel universes
“Innerspace exploration”
Interstellar communication
“Is there a God?”
- The Bible – 5 to 7 billion copies
- Quotations from Chairman Mao Tse-Tung – 900 million copies
- The Quran – at least 800 million copies
- Don Quixote – at least 500 million copies
- A Tale of Two Cities – at least 200 million copies
- The Book of Mormon – 192 million copies
- The Lord of the Rings (150 million)
- The Little Prince – 145 million copies
- Harry Potter and the Sorcerer’s Stone – 120 million copies
- The Hobbit – 100 million copies
The first photograph taken by Joseph Nicéphore Niépce is called “View from the Window at Le Gras.” It was created between 1826 and 1827 and is considered the oldest surviving photograph.
The first television sitcom was “Pinwright’s Progress,” which aired on the BBC in 1946. The first American sitcom was “Mary Kay and Johnny,” which premiered in 1947.
Second minute hour day week month year decade century millennium
Past present future
First radio ad:
First website:
http://info.cern.ch
Inch foot yard mile
french english dutch roman
The very first newspaper, known as “Relation aller Fürnemmen und gedenckenwürdigen Historien,” was published in 1605 in Strasbourg. The headline of this groundbreaking publication translates to “Account of All Distinguished and Commemorable Stories.”
The very first magazine is considered to be the “Erbauliche Monaths-Unterredungen” (Edifying Monthly Discussions), published in Germany from 1663 to 1668. However, the first magazine that called itself a magazine was “The Gentleman’s Magazine,” first published in January 1731, which included various articles and discussions of the time.
The first movie is often considered to be “Roundhay Garden Scene,” filmed in 1888 by Louis Le Prince, which is a short clip showing people in a garden. However, the definition of the “first movie” can vary, with other contenders like “The Horse in Motion” (1878) and the Lumière brothers’ films from 1895 also being significant in film history.
(Child’s Play:)
Charles Manson,
Lee Harvey Oswald,
James Earl Ray
Both killers and victims:
☆(cehs-cehts)☆
John Wilkes Booth (Abraham Lincoln), Charles Guiteau (James A. Garfield), Leon Czolgosz (William McKinley), and Lee Harvey Oswald (John F. Kennedy).
5 richest living men of the world:
Elon Musk Jeff bezos bernard arnault bill gates mark Zukerberg
Disney Characters:
Mickey Mouse Donald Duck
Goofy Pluto Minnie Mouse Daisy Duck
(Cehs,cehts)
The main characters from “Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs” include Snow White, the Evil Queen, the Huntsman, the Magic Mirror, and the Seven Dwarfs: Doc, Grumpy, Happy, Sleepy, Bashful, Sneezy, and Dopey
10 most valuable companies:
- Nvidia – $4.5 trillion
- Apple – $4.1 trillion
- Alphabet (Google) – $3.9 trillion
- Microsoft – $3.6 trillion
- Amazon – $2.4 trillion
- Broadcom – $1.9 trillion
- Meta Platforms (Facebook) – $1.6 trillion
- Saudi Aramco – $1.6 trillion
- TSMC – $1.5 trillion
- Tesla
The top 10 most traded currencies in the world are the US dollar (USD), euro (EUR), Japanese yen (JPY), British pound (GBP), Australian dollar (AUD), Canadian dollar (CAD), Swiss franc (CHF), Chinese renminbi (CNY), Hong Kong dollar (HKD), and New Zealand dollar (NZD). These currencies dominate global forex trading due to their stability and liquidity.
Cesphccehs x 2
(CES)
Deus in omni iustitia dedit nobis regiis statum trium regna.
“individual,” “instruct,” “inform,” “internet” “inspire”
Capital punishment
Ko-Shinto religion,
Izumo Ooyashirokyō
Ellinovalkanikó Kyrillikó Alfávito
Pro sports:
Association football
American Canadian football
Australian rules football
Auto racing
Bandy
Baseball
Basketball
Bobsleigh
Bowling
Boxing
Cricket
Cue sports
Curling
Cycling
Darts
Disc Golf
eSports
Golf
Horse Racing
Ice hockey
Kabaddi
Kho-kho
Lacrosse
Mixed martial arts
Rugby league
Rugby union
Rodeo/bull riding
Running
Skateboarding
Surfing
Swimming
Team handball
Tennis
Ultimate Frisbee
First fashion house: “House of Worth”
haute couture
Major papers
The Vindicator – Youngstown
Akron Beacon Journal – Akron
The Repository – Canton
The Cincinnati Enquirer – Cincinnati
The Plain Dealer – Cleveland
The Columbus Dispatch – Columbus
Dayton Daily News – Dayton
The Blade – Toledo
Tribune Chronicle – Warren
Prefix Suffix root word.
Subject predicate
Top Ten Precious Mineral Mines on Earth
Grasberg Mine, Muruntau Mine,
Carlin Trend, Zinc and Lead Mines at Red Dog, Olympic Dam, Kakula Mine, Pueblo Viejo, Sibanye Stillwater, Fosterville Mine, Lagunas Norte
Cehsphccehts
Cehsphccehts
Prehistoric Era classial Era Middle ages , early Modern Era Modern era
1/4″, 5/16″, 3/8″, 7/16″, 1/2″, 9/16″, 5/8″, 11/16″, 3/4″, 13/16″, 7/8″, 15/16″, 1″
imperatorem
royalty
First typed sentance:
“Now is the time for all good men to come to the aid of the party.”
Qwer(t)y
The first mobile app is generally considered to be the Snake game, which was launched by Nokia in 1997 for its early mobile phones. This marked the beginning of mobile applications, which evolved significantly with the advent of smartphones.
Robot
Orphan
“Just be yourself, they’ll take care of everything”
-U.N.
The ball once struck off,
Away flies the boy
To the next destin’d post,
And Then home with joy.
Of Naismith’s 13 rules, introducing the game “basket-ball”(?)(1892):
“Basket ball shall be played by two teams of not less than three players each on a rectangular court.”
Etymology “Hockey” 1527:
the horlinge of the litill balle with hockie stickes or staves
(1891?) Etymology, Soccer (“socker”):
“The ’Varsity played Aston Villa and were beaten after a very exciting game; this was pre-eminently the most important ‘Socker’ game played in Oxford this term.”
Golf boxing tennis badminton
Richard Steele, first known use of text in reference to boxing (THE SPORT)(1712)(In the Englishman”
☆ “box”. ☆
“We have certain methods by which we may exercise our bodies, or, as it is more properly called, box, and with these methods, we may also cultivate our minds.”
“Golf”
The full sentence from the Scottish Act of March 6, 1457, is:
“Item, it is statute and ordained that the futeball and the golf be utterly cryt done, and nocht usit.”
The first recorded use of the word “softball” appeared in the Freeport (Illinois) Daily Journal on May 14, 1867. The exact sentence was:
“The game of ball, in which the players use a large, soft ball, has attracted considerable attention.”
The first documented use of the word “Microsoft” is found in a letter by Bill Gates dated November 26, 1976. The exact sentence is: “As the name suggests, it is a combination of microcomputer and software.” This letter was addressed to a magazine and discussed the potential of microcomputer software.
The exact first sentence to use the term “PlayStation” comes from the patent US5551693A, filed by Sony in 1994. The phrase found in the patent states:
“A controller unit for video games, in which a player can manipulate the controller, thereby controlling the operation of the gaming machine, including the PlayStation.”
First documented use of ICANN in proposal to (U.S. Congress?)
“The Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers (ICANN) is a new corporation being formed to oversee the distribution of unique identifiers on the Internet.”
The first recorded use of the phrase “World Wide Web” appeared in a proposal written by Tim Berners-Lee on March 12, 1989. The exact sentence that uses the term is:
“The WorldWideWeb: Proposal for a Hypertext Project.”
The very first documented use of the phrase “National Football League” comes from a Thanksgiving Day game on November 27, 1902. The championship game was billed as such, but it is important to note that this was for a different, short-lived league, not the NFL we know today. The exact sentence from that time refers to a matchup billed for the “championship of the National Football League.”
This early iteration of the NFL was based primarily in Pennsylvania and lasted only one season before folding. However, the modern National Football League was established later, in 1920, originally as the American Professional Football Association (APFA), before adopting the name “National Football League” in 1922.
“The Ultimate Fighting Championship (later renamed UFC 1: The Beginning) was the first mixed martial arts event by the Ultimate Fighting Championship (UFC), held at the McNichols Sports Arena in Denver, Colorado, United States, on November 12, 1993.”
First use of “The United States of America”. The final paragraph of the Declaration of Independence.
“We, therefore, the Representatives of the united States of America, in General Congress, Assembled, appealing to the Supreme Judge of the world for the rectitude of our intentions, do, in the Name, and by Authority of the good People of these Colonies, solemnly publish and declare, That these United Colonies are, and of Right ought to be Free and Independent States.”
First use of Red-light district (1893?)
“Wing took his young wife to the bordello of Madam Mertie Edwards, on West Green street, the red-light district of Louisville.”
“The American Telephone and Telegraph Company was incorporated in New York in 1885, as a subsidiary of American Bell Telephone Company, to operate long-distance telephone lines.”
Very early use of the word “watt” in reference to energy.
“The electrical unit of power, the watt, is named after James Watt.”
“”The absolute watt is defined as the rate of energy transfer equivalent to one joule per second.”
The exact phrase “the great seal” first appears in the context of the Great Seal of the United States, specifically in a resolution passed by the Continental Congress on June 20, 1782. This resolution read: “Resolved, that the great seal of the United States be made.”
The phrase “United Nations” was first used in a speech by United States President Franklin D. Roosevelt on January 1, 1942. The exact sentence was:
“We here dedicate ourselves to the cause of peace. We here resolve to unite our efforts to defend our common civilization against the forces of destruction and chaos. We here declare that we are the United Nations.”
This moment marked the formal adoption of the name for the alliance of countries coming together to promote peace and cooperation.
“United Kingdom”, 1707:
“That the two kingdoms of Scotland and England shall be united into one kingdom by the name of Great Britain.”
Marco Polo, before he called it China:
“I will tell you of a province of Cathay, which is called Manzi.”
The term “artificial intelligence” was first coined by John McCarthy in 1955 when he proposed a conference at Dartmouth College, which is widely considered the founding moment of AI as a field. The first documented usage in a sentence from the proposal states:
“We will consider it a study of ‘intelligence’ in the original sense of ‘intelligent behavior,’ which it is to be understood as an artificial intelligence.”
This context laid the groundwork for subsequent developments and discussions in artificial intelligence research.
1613, Richard Braithwaite, first use of the word “computer”:
“A computer is a person who computes, or one who calculates.”
The very first use of the word “microphone” appeared in a sentence by Sir Charles Wheatstone in 1827. The sentence was:
“I have been thinking of making use of the microphone.”
“The use of microwave frequencies enables more efficient communication over long distances.”
The exact sentence from Robert Baden-Powell in 1897 that includes the word “watch” is:
“A boy should carry a watch, and should learn how to use it.”
The exact sentence incorporating the word “sports” from Geoffrey Chaucer’s “The Canterbury Tales” is:
“And whoso fyndeth him out of swich blame, They wol come up, and he shall have the same To play with them in sportes and in game.”
The specific sentence from John Trevisa’s 1398 translation of the “Polychronicon,” which metaphorically compares language to a stream, is as follows:
“For as a stream of water floweth by the way, so doth language in the world.”
“Unidentified Flying Objects (UFOB) — Relates to any airborne object which by performance, aerodynamic characteristics, or unusual features does not conform to any presently known aircraft or missile type, or which cannot be positively identified as a familiar object.”
First use words Electronic Dance Music, 1960.
“Electronic Dance Music… EDM; computer programmed to perfection for your listening pleasure.”
(Playboy: 1616)
“The rogue playboy that acts Cupid, is got so hoarse, your majesty cannot hear him.”
(CESCEHTS x 2)
1953, “Gang-bang”:
“He was kicked out of school for getting caught in a gang-bang with May Pearl Jackson in the boiler room.”
First known use of AFC; NFC, (1966):
“Under the merger agreement announced on June 8, 1966, the new league would be called the NFL and split into the American Football Conference (AFC) and the National Football Conference (NFC).”
“Blessed” (1175 a.d.):
“Heo duden on-dfonge [received] þene lauerd. and sungun. I-blesset beo he þe com on þes lauerdes halue.”
(1791) First known use of “skyscraper”:
“The vessel… is a very well-sailing ship…but she is too much of a sky-scraper.”
“Super Bowl”, first documented use known (1966) by Lamar Hunt:
“I have kiddingly called it the ‘Super Bowl,’ which obviously can be improved upon.”
“The TR-3B ASTRA, a rumored top-secret, anti-gravity reconnaissance aircraft developed under a Black project.”
1951, (Walter Winchell); “Rock and Roll”:
“I think that it’s time for our people to get the news; for a new sound has come to us, the sound of rock and roll.”
President (1392, Wycliffe’s Bible)
“For the president of this folk shal rise against the kyng”
C. 1200’s, “God Almighty”:
“On wel swuðe God ureisun of God Almihti…”
“Art”: 1394: John Wycliffe’s translation of the Bible:
“In the art of the brennynge of yoing.”
“guþ meins” (earliest usage of the word “God””)
The earliest usage of the word God in Germanic writing is often cited from the 6th-century Codex Argenteus, which contains a Gothic translation of the Bible. The phrase found there is “guþ meins,” meaning “my God.” This passage demonstrates the early Christian context in which the term was employed.
“Excitement”, first use, 1604, (William Shakespeare) Othello:
“I feel my excitement.”
“Video game(s)”, first use, Cash Box, April 14th, 1973:
“Then came Periscope, the quarter novelties, something called ‘Speedway,’ soccer tables, now hockey tables, and what do they call them, ‘video games.”
Chaucer, “music”:
“Also musike maketh musiciens, and phisike maketh phisiciens, and rethorike rethoriens.”
The exact sentence using the word “wealth” from The Proverbs of Alfred (1250) is:
“Without wisdom, wealth is worthless.”
First use of the word “Love”, John Wycliffe’s Bible (1384):
“For God louede so þe world, that he yaf his `oon bigetun sone, that ech man that bileueth in him perische not, but haue euerlastynge lijf.”
“Musica laetitiae est anima.”
- The phrase itself, “Musica laetitiae est anima,” reflects a common theme in early Christian and medieval writings, particularly from around the 5th to 12th centuries, when music was often associated with spiritual joy and the divine.
(1075 ad, apprx , “time”):
Hit wæs ða se tima ðe winberian ripodon
The complete sentence from George Villiers’ 1671 play “The Rehearsal” using the word “Hip Hop” is:
“For, to go off hip hop, hip hop, upon this occasion, is a thousand times better than any conclusion in the world, I gad.”
Earliest use of “Volleyball”:
“In 1896, the game originally called ‘Mintonette’ gained the name ‘volley ball’ due to its volleying nature.”
(5th – 12th century) One clear early example (from an Old English translation of the Ten Commandments) containing “me” is:
Ne lufa ðu oþre fremde godas ofer me.
(Do not love other foreign gods over me.)
The exact sentence that is attributed to William of Shoreham, around 1350, using the word “Bible”, is:
“Þe bible seyþe þat mannys blod”
The first sentence containing the word “arcane” in the writing of Andrew Borde is:
“Egregious Doctors and Masters of the Eximious and Arcane Science of Physick, of your Urbanity exasperate not your selves against me for making this little volume of Physick.“
The first use of the word “arcanum” by Edward Sandys occurs in the sentence:
“To comprehend arcanum, which we ought to reverently weigh, we should grasp its essence closely.“
“I never heard a passion so confused, so strange, outrageous, and so variable as the dog Jew did utter in the streets: ‘My daughter, O my ducats, O my daughter!
First use of “slave”:
c1300
“He was sone i-nome, Ase A sclaue forth i-lad and i-don In prisone.”
St. Thomas Becket
1669, first uae of “stock” in dealing with financial use.
“Many … put in different summes, which all together made up six hundred thousand pound, the first stock upon which this Company has built its prodigious Encrease.”
Superpower (1849):
“…of all the much harassed solitary superpower now left on the world scene.”
The earliest known exact sentence in its entirety containing the phrase “atomic bomb” is from H. G. Wells’s 1914 novel The World Set Free — the work widely acknowledged as the first publication to use that phrase in print. In the second chapter (“The Last War”) of the book, Wells writes:
“The gaunt face hardened to grimness, and with both hands the bomb-thrower lifted the big atomic bomb from the box and steadied it against the side.”
The exact sentence in which the word “state” appears in “Hali Meidenhad” (written around 1225) is:
“In the state of angels, as it was in heaven.”
Early Tarot reference (1505):
“The game of tarocchi is played in Ferrara.”
Earliest use of “Emperor” (1225):
“Þuruh Julianes heste þe Amperur.”
The earliest known written record of the phrase “Olympic Games” by Gervase Markham is found in his work “Devoreux, Vertues Tears”, published in 1597. The exact sentence, in its entirety, is as follows:
“All which shews the necessity of there being an Olympic games!”
John Wycliffe’s translation of the Bible, specifically in 1382. The exact sentence from that translation that first uses the word “news” is:
“But now it is in the time of news.”
(1734, “camera”)
“This Camera has several Advantages beyond the common one; for in this, Objects as big as the Life may be taken.”
Heiland, 800’s
“tho sagda he that her scoldi cumin en wiscuning
mari endi mahtig an thesan middelgard
bezton giburdies; quad that it scoldi wesan barn godes,
quad that he thesero weroldes waldan scoldi
gio te ewandaga, erdun endi himiles.”
First use of “Baseball” (1791) by Abner Doubleday:
“Baseball is played with a bat and ball between two sides of 12 players each.“
Early reference:
(1902?, 1904?) “The History of the Standard Oil Company”
Earliest usage of “crypology”, 1645 is included in the book by Howell:
*Epistolæ Ho-elianae *
First written use of “French kiss” (1836), Charles Dickens:
“I do not think there would be any harm in sending him a French kiss. It is what no English lawyer can object to, it being only justice to make both sides of the face alike.”
“”Creation” first appears in English in William Langland’s “Piers Plowman,” specifically around 1390. An example from the text is:
“In the firste creature that ever was, the creation of the world.”
The first sentence to use the word “cinema” is from a letter written by French filmmaker Louis Lumière in 1895. The sentence is: “The cinema is an invention without a future.”
First use of “insurance”, by Udall (1556):
“For the more part, when the insurance is made, it is made with three parties.”
Early (16c.) use of the word “politic”:
“It is politic to avoid unnecessary controversy.”
Here is the very first sentence of “Res gestae Saxonicae” exactly as it appears at the opening of the Latin text in the Monumenta Germaniae Historica (MGH) edition (the standard scholarly Latin text):
“Supersunt libri tres rerum gestarum Saxonicarum, quibus auctor tam populi originem quam res ab Heinrico atque Ottone gestas descripsit.”
“Now I lay me down to sleep,
I pray the Lord my Soul to keep[;]
If I should die before I ‘wake,
I pray the Lord my Soul to take.”
Geoffrey Chaucer, (early use of the word “country”), The Canterbury Tales:
“For he was late ycome from his country.”
First use of “gun”: In the wardrobe accounts of Edward III for 1330–1331 (Latin administrative records), a large cannon at Windsor is mentioned by name. The relevant entry reads:
“Item, pro una magna gune vocata Domina Gunilda.”
Early (earliest?) use of the verb “sue”. A commonly cited early Middle English sentence (c. 1230–1250) reads:
“Þe king mai sue for his rihte in his curt.”
1387(?) or so to 1400, early reference to “money” by Chaucer (in The Pardoner’s Tale):
“Radix malorum est cupiditas” translates to “The love of money is the root of all evil,” which captures the essence of the theme.
The word “word”. The phrase “Wurdon, thah se word gelaudig” translates to “They became, although the word was spoken.”
The Old Saxon epic Heliand was composed around 830 AD. It is attributed to the early medieval period, specifically during the reign of Emperor Louis the Pious.
The word “death” appears in the Old English epic poem “Beowulf,” between the 8th and 11th c., specifically in the line:
“þæt wæs se geatolic eard, sæt þæt wæs se gæð.”
Earliest known use of “Mother”, Old English, 950 ad(approxi-mately):
“Mater, anes cildes modor. Materfamilias, manigra cilda modur.”
Cleopatra Glossary in W. G. Stryker, Latin-Old English Glossary in MS Cotton Cleopatra A.III
“baby”,
- c1400 (c1378)
With penaunce and passioun of þat babi.
W. Langland, Piers Plowman (MS Laud 581) (1869) B. xvii. l. 95
[Composed c1378] - c1400 (?a1387)
Be-leyue leelly vpon that litel baby.
W. Langland, Piers Plowman (MS Huntington HM 137) (1873) C. xx. l. 92 (Middle English Dictionary)
[Composed ?a1387
The exact line in “Beowulf” that includes the word “never” is:
“Þæt is ne deaðe nǽfre / ne sǽde he.”
“RACE”:
1400 (c1300)
To the bischope in a ras He ran.
Northern Homily:
Early use of the noun “me” from 1387/1400 ad:
“But for ye wiste how that me grieveth.”
Chaucer’s The Canterbury Tales.
1707 (“Party”)
Give me a Man that keeps his Five Senses keen and bright as his Sword,..with his Reason as Commander at the Head of ’em, that detaches ’em by turns upon whatever Party of Pleasure agreeably offers.
-G. Farquhar,
“Celebrate”:
(c1380)
“What demest þou þan..þat is ryȝt clere and ryȝt noble of celebrete of renoun [Latin omni celebritate]?
1400, First known use of “khan”, MANDEVILLE’S TRAVELS:
1400, “khan” MANDEVILLE’S TRAVELS:
“The grete Cham, that is clept the grete Khan, is the moste myghty prince and lord of alle the world.”
Earliest use of word “human”: c1450 “For the gret compassion and pitee that he hadde upon all humaigne lynage.”
-translation of Book of Knight of La Tour Landry.
Today, Apple is going to reinvent the phone.
One of the earliest complete sentences in which the word “mummie” appears is from the late 14th-century Middle English translation of the Circa instans (a medical text sometimes associated with the tradition of the Constantine the African corpus):
“Mummie is a spice that is hote and drye in the seconde degre.”
Earliest spelling of “Chicken” 🐔:
“Swa seo henn hyre cicenu”
(980 ad)
1545 ad
(first use of “energy”)
“Which I doubt not hath efficace strengthe and energie to chaunge the very cowarde harte to be hardie bolde and coragious.”
E. Walshe
“For we shall telle of love, or of history.”
Geoffrey Chaucer
The Canterbury Tales, (1380’s-1400 ad)
The exact early sentence from John Lydgate’s writing (1425 ad) that includes the word “pedigree” is:
“When the pedigree hath been well read.”
1225 ad. First use of “fame”:
“Þis fame is in muche stead, for here is treure of heorte.”
18th century (early use of “organization”)
“The better organization of our political body…”
“Cranium” early, 16c. use: “The bone named Cranium, or the fyrst table of bones of the heade.”
“Cock”, in reference to male genetalia, 1380’s, Geoffrey Chaucer:
“He praieth for a shere and he for a cock.”
The earliest recorded use of the word “dick” in reference to male genitalia appears in Richard Head’s 1665 satire, “The English Rogue.” The full sentence is:
“The next Dick I pickt up for her was a man of a colour as contrary to the former, as light is to darkness, being swarthy; whose hair was as black as a sloe; middle statur’d, well set, both strong and active, a man so universally tryed, and so fruitfully successful, that there was hardly any female within ten miles gotten with child in hugger-mugger, but he was more than suspected to be Father of all the legitimate. Yet this too, proved an ineffectual Operator.”
This passage indicates the term’s use in a context related to masculinity and sexual ability.
“World” from Beowulf:
“Forsoð, eall weoruld is swylce.”
*Earliest use of “Star” (Theater, Movie, etc.)
[1751
“You may Shine the brightest Theatric Star, that ever enliven’d or charm’d an Audience.”
Earliest use of “Freedom” *Wærferth was a Bishop of Worcester who trans-lated “The Dialogues of Gregory the Great” into Old English in the late ninth century:
“Ða se Honoratus weox & þeah mid mycclum mægnum, oþ þæt æt nyxstan he wæs gearad mid freodome fram his hlaforde þam forecwedenan.”
Wærferð, translation of Gregory, Dialogues
(“war”‘s early usage, late 9th century):
“Se cyng Henri fylste his nefan þam eorle Tædbalde de Blais þe þa wyrre hæfde togeanes his hlaforde þam cynge of France.”
Anglo-Saxon Chronicle
Amerigo Vespucci (early 1600’s) first to use phrase “New World”:
“It is lawful to call it a new world, because none of these countries were known to our ancestors.”
Early use of “orgy”, From Hudibras (Part I, 1663) by Samuel Butler:
“And in their subtle orgy play / Upon the passions what they may.”
“University”
c1300
“So þat he bigan at Oxenford of diuinite, So noble alosed þer nas non in al þe vniuersite.”
St. Edmund Rich
Both killers and victims:
☆(cehts)☆
Marcus Junius Brutus
(Gaius Julius Caesar) ,
☆(cehs-cehts)☆
(America) John Wilkes Booth (Abraham Lincoln), Charles Guiteau (James A. Garfield), Leon Czolgosz (William McKinley), and Lee Harvey Oswald (John F. Kennedy).
Moretum
(Salad)
cheese, garlic, rue,herbs, vinegar oil
Capitalism
Xanomeline/trospium chloride
International Fixed Calendar
(13th month calendar)
“…June, Sol, July…”
The earliest use of the word “secret” (John Gower, 1378)
“Thou shalt not tell it, for it is secre.”
The exact wording of the first recorded instance using the phrase “secret service” can be found in a 1706 text by Jonathan Swift. The sentence is:
“In all the secret service of the Crown, both at home and abroad.”
Georgia
Maryland
New York
North Carolina
South Carolina
Virginia
West Virginia
“See yonder, lo, the Galaxyë Which men clepeth the Milky Wey, For hit is whyt.” [Chaucer, “House of Fame” late 14th c.]
The earliest recorded use of the verb “hit” in English is found in a text dated to 1297. The exact sentence from the Ancrene Wisse is:
“For hit is Goddes will, that he has to be on live.”
The first recorded use of the noun “hit” in English appears in the context of gambling from the late 16th century. The exact sentence is found in 1599 in a work attributed to William Shakespeare. It states:
“A hit, a very palpable hit.”
The Canterbury Tales, Chaucer. “Trust”” 1380s – 1400:
“For if a preest be foul, on whom we truste, No wonder is a lewed man to ruste.”
Amazing Grace (former name & musical notes)
The earliest use of the phrase “the State of Ohio” appears in the preamble of the Ohio Constitution, which was adopted on November 29, 1802. The exact sentence is:
“We, the people of the State of Ohio, do mutually agree with each other to form ourselves into a free and independent state, by the name of The State of Ohio.”
The earliest English use of “cosmos” cited by the Oxford English Dictionary occurs in the 1556 English translation of The Paraphrases of Erasmus upon the New Testament, originally by Desiderius Erasmus.
The full sentence (with original sixteenth-century spelling preserved) reads:
“This worlde or cosmos, which is the whole frame and compasse of heaven and earth, with all that therein is conteined.”
This is the earliest attested complete English sentence known to contain the word “cosmos.”
(Shanghai Theater (district?))
☆Shànghǎi Huàjù Yìshù Zhōngxīn☆
intertextuality
According to vexillological research, the term first appeared in print in the 1872 edition of Rear Admiral George Henry Preble’s History of the Flag of the United States of America (where he substituted “grand” for an earlier “great” from a 1776 newspaper account). Preble writes:
“The “grand union flag” of thirteen stripes was raised on a height near Boston.”
money symbol
- Paparazzi
狗仔队
gǒuzǎiduì
Edward
☆UNITEDSTAR
United
●Was “Ted” saved for me, imparticularly?●
represented by “Old Glory Red” (PMS 193 C), “Old Glory Blue” (PMS 281 C), and white, which is the natural color of the fabric. The red is a deep shade (#B22234), the blue is a medium tone (#00205B), and white is simply pure white (#FFFFFF) in digital formats.
1290s, first use of the word “tax”.
“Mo then ten sithen told y my tax. “
The 12 disciples: Peter, Andrew, James, John, Philip, Bartholomew, Thomas, Matthew, James, Thaddaeus, Simon, Judas
An early published sentence using the term “World Trade Center” (1960, in planning reports and press coverage) reads:
“The Port of New York Authority today announced plans for a World Trade Center in lower Manhattan.”
Rigveda (Vedic Sanskrit, c. 1500 – 1200 BCE):
The Hiraṇyagarbha Sūkta of the Rigveda describes a single supreme creator from whom the universe emerges. Although not literally the phrase “God of the universe,” one translation of a verse in this hymn says something functionally equivalent, describing the supreme deity as the source and totality of creation:
“He was born like a human being, and he directed all this universe…”
Earliest use of “Liberty”, c1405 (c1375)
“This world hadde hym [sc. Holofernes] in awe For lesynge of richesse of libertee.”
G. Chaucer, Monk’s Tale
In Wycliffe’s Bible, the passage from Luke 1:5 is rendered in Middle English as follows:
“In the daies of Herod, kyng of Jewry, ther was a prest, Zacharie, of the cours of Abia; and his wyf was of the douytris of Aaron, and hir name was Elizabeth.”
Earliest use of “Christmas” around 1000 ad:
“Leohtgescot gelæste man be wite to Cristesmæssan and to candelmæssan and to eastron.”
-Wulfstan, Homily: Be Cristendome
The earliest securely dated full Latin sentence containing “coronation” occurs in the Frankish royal annals for the year 800, describing the imperial crowning of Charlemagne:
“Et facta est ibi coronatio domini Caroli imperatoris a Leone papa.”
— Annales Regni Francorum (entry for A.D. 800)
Here is the critical Latin text of the year 800 entry from the standard edition:
— Annales Regni Francorum (ed. Friedrich Kurze, Monumenta Germaniae Historica, entry for Christmas Day 800 a.d.)
(Coronation of Charlamagne):
-Scholarly opininion, the more elaborate political theolo-gical explanation may have been added:
either in 801–802
or during a broader redaction around c. 806–809
possibly even later in the 810s.
(The only serving manuscript is from 840’s)
“Et quia tunc imperatoris nomen apud Graecos cessabat et femineum imperium apud eos erat, visum est ipsi apostolico Leoni et universis sanctis patribus qui in ipso concilio aderant, seu reliquo Christiano populo, ut ipsum Carolum regem Francorum imperatorem nominare deberent; qui ipsam Romam tenebat, ubi semper Caesares sedere consueverant, et ceteras sedes quas ipse in Italia seu Gallia atque Germania tenebat; quia Deus omnipotens has omnes sedes in potestate eius concesserat: unde et in ipsa nativitate Domini nostri Iesu Christi, cum ad missam beati Petri apostoli assisteret, Leo papa coronam capiti eius imposuit, et ab omnibus Romanis imperator augustus appellatus est.”
The exact sentence by Stanley Woodward that first used the term “ivy” in reference to colleges is:
“A proportion of our eastern ivy colleges are meeting little fellows another Saturday before plunging into the strife and the turmoil.”
This quote was published in the New York Tribune on October 14, 1933 and reflects his commentary on college football at the time.
Alan Gould on February 8, 1935, “Ivy League”:
“The Ivy League will be a social league rather than an athletic league.”
1425)
“alphabet”:
“Y have be instructe in Latyn and Grewe, but y perceyvede not the a. b. c. or alphabete [Latin alphabetum] of that chorle.”
(Eearly 10th c.) First use of “body”:
“Wæs he Oswine se cyning ge on onsyne fæger ge on bodie heah.”
translation of Bede, Ecclesiastical History
“The Rabble, that is, the Mobile, or Mob, began to assemble about the streets.”
Underground Railroad
Android
Computer-generated holography
Giza Necropolis, Al Giza Desert, Giza Governorate, Arab Republic of Egypt
Giuseppe Pitrè, (1870’s) “mafioso”:
“In Sicilia è più corretto dire di un uomo che è ‘mafioso’ che dire che appartiene alla mafia.”
The earliest use of the term “information technology” appears in a 1958 article in the Harvard Business Review. The full sentence referencing this term is:
“The new technology does not yet have a single established name.
☆”We shall call it information technology (I.T.).”☆
Early use from
1254 a.d. “Holy Roman Empire”:
“sacrum Romanum imperium”
The National Anthem
The National March
Human Genome Project
Cleveland
“One,” ☆Law of Æthelberht (the earliest notable text written in english), 600 a.d.☆:
“Gif man an oþerne ofslea, L scillinga gebete.”
_That us to say: Old English:
“In hūs fǣder mīnes hāmas manega sind.”
(First use of “home”) –
John 14:2
This sentence appeared in the Washington Post article titled “FAN FRENZY!” published on May 23, 1981.
“Other professionals include paparazzi, celebrity secretaries and the occasional spouse.”
TIME Magazine (early 1960s) “Paparrazzi”:
“He is a paparazzo—one of a ravenous wolf pack of freelance photographers who stalk big names for a living and fire with flash guns at point-blank range.”
The Press: Paparazzi on the Prowl
(1121-1125) Anglo-Norman dictionary: earliest use of “heir”:
“Puroc guerpit cist reials eirs
Les fals honurs pur iceals veirs.”
Ancrene Wisse (1225 ad),
“Air”:
“Þe eir of heouene is clene and briȝt.”
Francis Herbert Wenham, (1866), aeroplane, about 50 years prior to “airplane”:
“Each aeroplane of one foot span and six inches deep would sustain a weight of from one to two pounds.”
Merriam-Webster (1906) early use of “airplane”:
“The airplane had a single, four-cylinder, gasoline-fueled piston engine, capable of producing about 12 horsepower.”
“Airport”, The Times of London (Aug 23rd, 1919):
“The airport for the proposed new service is to be established at Lympne.”
Primary airports in Ohio:
☆CAK, CLE, DAY, CMH, LCK, TOL☆
“the royal we”
(19th c.)
“This first royal we, which associated the French with the prosperity of this family, was a most bitter pill to me.”
Three (capitols of Florida in its history):
St. Augustine, Pensacola, Tallahassee
California capitols in
its history: Monterey, San Jose, Vallejo, Benicia, Sacramento, San Francisco, Sacramento
“Hwa” (“who”) approx. 900 a.d.:
“Ac hwa mæg eaðost ealra gesceafta ða halgan duru heofona rices torhte ontynan?”
Metrical Dialogue of Solomon & Saturn
Parliament of the World’s Religions
Cathedral of the Intercession of the Most Holy Theotokos on the Moat
James Howell (1645), “cryptology”:
“The Art of Writing in Cipher may be called the Cryptology, or Writing Secretly.”
“Law”, Laws of Æðelred II (MS Claudius), (1000 a.d.):
“Gif he hine ladian wille & mage, do þæt be þam deopestan aðe oþþe mid þryfealdan ordale on Ængla lage, & on Dena lage be þam þe heora lagu sy.”
Carl Linneaus (1735 a.d.)
(Regnum Animale):
“Animalia organisatione viva, nervis sentiunt, percipiunt, seque ex arbitrio movent motu possibili.”
Carl Linnaeus:(1735 a.d.) “MINERAL KINGDOM”:
“Terras tantummodo glaream & argillam nominamus, e quibus elementorum ope totum regnum lapideum existimamus esse productum.”
Earliest use of “like” (Old English):
“His son was him like.”
The “Capitular of Herstal” (8th century a.d.) Earliest record of Charlamagne:
“Karolus, gratia Dei rex Francorum et Lombardorum.”
Earliest use of “danger” (1225 a.d.) Ancrene Riwle:
“The deofles chef.”
“Fun”, (1756) C. Anstey, Mem. Noted Buckhorse:
“What Fun have I seen, says he, on a Friday in Smithfield!”
“Please”
(1300-1350a.d.)
Midland Prose Psalter
“For God wasted þe bones of hem þat plesen to men.”
Christopher Columbus (1492), first use of “Indian”:
“A la primera que yo hallé puse nombre San Salvador y los Indios la llaman Guanahaní.”
(1810’s) first use of term “third eye”, Edward Moor:
“Siva, to avert the calamity of such lengthened gloom, placed a third eye in his forehead.”
“Hindu”
“The Hindoos are those whom we commonly call Gentiles, the naturall inhabitants of Indostan.”
Ashwagandha
Aquila Chrysaetos
Me: Micros
Father: oft
Holiness Knowing Everything Vajradhara Dalai Lama
Chorus to Michael Jackson’s “Thriller”:
C# – C# – C# – B – A – G# – F#
- C# – C# – C# – B – A – G# – F#
- C# – C# – C# – B – A – G# – F#
- B – A – G# – F# – E – F# – G#
Did
Dyde
Gay
Ghutom
(God)
Mary Eddy(,) Amy Doggett
Saguaro
Leopard
Genius
Fencing
Confessio Amantis by John Gower- “history” (1390 a.d.):
“I finde in a bok compiled to this matiere an olde historie, the which comth nou to mi memoire.”
Halloween
Michael Jackson
“Billie Jean”:
- F# – C# – D – B – C# – F#
- F# – A – B – C# – A – F# – E – D
- F# – A – B – C# – A – F# – E – D
- F#m – C#m – D – A
highway
William Shakespeare, “dawn” (1592 a.d.):
“With the first light of dawn, my sword shall be my guide.”
Early use of “godfather” Chaucer (1380s):
“For I am his godfather.”
1375 (“third”)
The thridde Parte of the Mansione of the seide manere of Mapulderham.
in A. H. Cooke
Brahma
Second minute quarter past, half-hour, quarter till hour
Three (former; present) capitols of Ohio:
☆Chillicothe, Zanesville, Columbus☆
“Dead” (740 a.d.) Poenitentiale Pseudo-Egberti:
“Gif mus on wætan befealle.., gif heo þonne dead sy, geote hit man ut & þwea þæt fæt.”
translation of Bede, Ecclesiastical History, “own” (731 a.d.):
“His agen sunu Alhfrið & Æðelwald his broðor sunu, se ær him riice hæfde.”
“Car” (1320):
In 24 Carcloutis cum clavis pro eisdem;”
Cat dog fish bird
Hanyu pinyin
1363, first use of word “popular”, Guy de Chauliac:
“The cause of this aposteme is of corrupt humours engendred of popular ayre and evyll dyete.”
Early use within
Wycliffe’s Bible, (1382), “birthday”:
“Eroude in his birthe day made a soper to the princes.”
Clesedv
Har vard
Ceht
Etymology of “two”; “the”
Also: “No”. 1330
PIE: “ne”: Not.
Numeral
Number
NOVA (NEWS)
3 5 7 1 12
Eagle
Vitis vinifera
SUN
CES
Church
Cehii
Chucky
Chucky
PIE
Rock and Roll
Rock
Chucky
Ward
Pop
Flag
D.a.r.e.
“I Double dog dare you.”
Supply and demand
Annual perentage rate
4 suits (playing cards)
Then: spades, hearts, diamonds, clubs, stars
Church
Chucky
Product key
Dragon
Hinkel(?)
Keht2
Kick
Chick
electromagnetism
Lutetia Parisorum
artificial satellites
Hinkel= translates to “satellite(s?”)
business
“The Universal Kingdom”
“Charles Edward Hinkel 2nd”
Financial independence
Tu es Petrus et super hanc petram aedificabo ecclesiam meam
Point of view
Pov
Holographic camera
769342
Gficdb
“Ex multis ad unum”.
“Two become one”.
Sichou zhi lu
Seidenstrasse.
Pi to the 10 millionth place:
3.14159265
Carolus Di
☆30 DIGITS OF PI
(3.14159265358979323846264338327)
☆30 digits of pi:
Carolus Eadpeard
Hinkelus Secundus
‐—————————-
Minus a “0”,
☆74 digits of pi☆
——-‐———————
Three stars
“Samsung”
(Secundo)
Verizon
Award
Oscar
Hello
Goodbye
Teddy II
California republic
(State flag)
Movie
Coca-Cola
Pepsi
etc.
United
I do.
Location:
40.797513
-81.4190751
Soccer
Football
Madison Avenue
Fifth Avenue
(Bordering Ohio)
Pennsylvania West Virginia Kentucky Indiana Ontario
Air (difference between)
Cehs vs. Cehs
Drachma
Shekel
Us
Purple Dragon
Star power
Wind break
The Natural
Passion X
Take the Coal
The Extra Mile
Puzzle
mysterium
Genius
Queen
Sequoyah
Uncle Sam
Cult
Kongō Gumi
Robot
Guilder
Hindustan
Truth
True
Sade
Key
Puranas
“Time”-
Cehts
cuneiform
Books
Relationship
Eternal life
Arm
Right
Left
Oh
Vaudeville
World
“The happy mad rich one”
Virgil’s birth
To 11_30_1979
748,064 days
-death
Augustus’ death to 11_30_1979:
717,806 days
Julius Caesar birth:
759114
geiaad
death:
738779
William Shakespeare
D. 132,793
Acbgic
Mbgic
Chapps
Chinggis khan
B.
298,579
D.274759
William orange
D. 144,403
B. 163,108
Hugh Hefner’s
B. 19593
Aieic
Chuck
Cehii
Gife (Life, fear, fire, film, etc.)
11,456,611 minutes between my birth minute (9:32 a.m.) and flight 175 colliding into wtc (9:03 a.m.). Reconfigure:
6 4561111 (similar to WH ph. #)
Magic of CES
Adam:
Creation to my bday:
2184948 days
Bahdidh
Bahgdad
Adam creation October 23, 4004 b.c.
Today, October 23, 2025 difference: 2201712 days
☆B.-9/11/01♡7955 d, 23 h, 14m♡
=”Gieevcad”
=”Charles 2″
=”Christ”
Twice
Geoffrey Chaucer, first use of the word “universe”:
“For I am as it is in the universe.”
volt, ampere, ohm, watt
(1967, proceedings of the first…)
(First to use the word “haplogroup”):
International Congress of The Transplantation Society
The first sentence in “Land of Cokaygne” (1335) that uses the word “union” is: “In that land, and in union, there is no pain.”
The first sentence (1225 ad) in Hali Meidenhad that utilizes the word “state” is:
“Iher me, dohter, bihald ant bei thin eare, ant foryet ti folc ant tines feader hus.”
“No” (1330 a.d.), Arthur and Merlin:
“No man shall know.”
Moretum
Pesto
Salad
Baseball
Isabell
The Metropolitan Opera
Library of Congress
Cyber
Parousia
Fumbleball
Nederlandse gulden
Alarm
Fm
Am
Krishna Janmashtami
Wall
Cehii
Playboy
(Chinese stock market), Shanghai:
Shànghǎi Zhèngquàn Jiāoyì Suǒ
The earliest known sentence in English to use the noun “photograph” appears in a letter written by Sir John Herschel in 1839, the year he introduced the word to the Royal Society. The letter is dated 28 February 1839 and addressed to William Henry Fox Talbot.
“I send you a photograph of a bust of Apollo, taken from the original marble.”
“Country music, which is derived from Southern folk music, is a growing genre in the United States.”
Cyberspace
Wycliffe Bible (1382) earliest use (Gospel of Luke) of “the Chosen” direct ancestor of the phrase “chosen one”:
” And the puple stood and bihelde; and the princis scornyden hym with hem, and seiden, Othere men he made saaf; make he hym silf saaf, if this be Crist, the chosun of God.”
NewYear’s Day Martin Luther King Jr. Day Presidents’ Day Memorial Day Independence Day Labor Day Columbus Day Veterans Day Thanksgiving Christmas Day
- 1862
“There is too much ‘Pop’ for the thorough enjoyment of the chamber music.”
‘G. Eliot’, Letter 26 November (1956) vol. IV. 67 - 1935
Turn the record over and you have another winner—‘Add a Little Wiggle’—a masterpiece made out of a song-and-dance ‘pop
Alisaunder of Macedoine (c. 1340–1370) comes from the Alexander A fragment. The word appears in contexts discussing fate or what is ordained for Alexander.
One such cited line (normalized from manuscript spelling) ☆”destiny”☆ is:
“For þus his destinee was demed and shapen.”
“Caedmons(sp.?) Hymn” earliest use of “and”, (658-680 a.d.):
“Meotodes meahte and his modgeþanc, weorc Wuldor-Fæder, swa he wundra gehwæs geworhte”
“Lion”:
“Walwe” (1960’s)
Both (secundus)
Lydian word for pressing upon first coins.
“Lowse me, lauerd, ut of þe liunes muð.”
— from an Old English/Middle English text St. Margaret of Antioch, circa 1200, where liunes is an early form of lion’s.
☆Earliest use of “crown”, West Saxon Gospels, (10th c.)
Matt. 27:29☆
“And hi gewundon him þornene crune, and asetton on his heafod, and hreod on his swyþran hand.”
SON
Chaucer (1405) earliest use of word “funeral”:
“For he hath had a funeral.”
“Beowulf”, earliest use of the word “death” (700-1000 ad):
“Ælc man sceal his endebyrdnesse on lande awaits; læt se þe mæge æfter deaðe wuldor acwellen – þæt bið æfter ælcre heorðe ænige æðele.”
“Parousia” aka the Second Coming. (1380’s) John Wycliffe’s Bible:
“For he shall come with great glorie, and shal make the world to know of his parousia.”
Earliest use of “Easter”, 930’s a.d.:
“Phase, eastran.”
The earliest sentence using the word “cipher” in literature comes from William Langland’s poem “Piers Plowman,” dated around 1399. The line is:
“For it is a ciphre in sight.”
This usage reflects the word’s connection to a figure or symbol, aligning with its historical meanings related to secret writing or codes.
(1533) William Tyndale, earliest usage of the word “Dada”:
“And for because ye be the sons of God, God hath sent the spirit of his Son into your hearts, crying, Abba, pater (as a man would say, Dada, father).”
“Father” 1025-1050 a.d.
“Ne slea man fæderas for suna gylton, ne suna for fædera gylton”
☆Old English Hexateuch
Cryptopaneponymic
Nir
Term used to describe “schizophrenia” before: “dementia praecox”
The U.N. flag
2 olive branches
8 leaves left
8 leaves right
16 total leaves
5 circle lines (o’s)
6 continents
33 sectors of circular lines
“C”, olive bran-ches
5D
azimuthal equidistant
I graeca
Cmyk color model:
cyan, magenta, yellow, (and) key
(The only Sextillionaire?)
“The” (thorn)
(“eth” is interchangibly used with “thorn”)
Two(twa) Henry’s time.
The (“tie”?, cets?)
School subjects, World Currencies
—-‐———————–
All of the subject words herein on these pages, and the thousands that have been deleted, plus the pages on my computer all spell out my name, and pertain to me, through name, acronym, historical keywords, etc.:
Native name instead of “America”,
“Abya Yala”-
World Council of Indigenous Peoples
(Consejo Mundial de Pueblos Indígenas)
Hylacomylus
Uncle Sam
☆Washington District of Columbia☆
II=We
Europe
Jesus Christ
Momolatry
Twice
quantum supremacy
You States
The history of presidents 1 to 16. Who are we? Royal/First family.
KT and Me.
Aerial screw
Airplane
The United Friends Party
“Governance based upon proven alliances and ingenuity.”
I1
We: (II)
PINYIN
Arri
National Public Radio
Metamodernism
Mesopotamia
Cehts
Two too
☆♡(Rock and roll) ☆♡PIE:
Gerh2 kent (konk)
Dwo ♡☆
Charles Edward Hinkel II
World Trade Center(?)
Hinkelology
Hinkelanity
Hinkelean
philosophy
The
Caucasian
Do Re MI Fa So La Ti Do
septem sorores
(Seven sisters)
Utopian socialism
Utopia
“Ing” 5th-11th c.
Hcp
“-ed” 12th century
“ly”
Vaginal canal
Vulva
Clitoris
(Serotonin)○●5-hydroxytryptamine●○
Petroleum
Oil
Ophiophagus hannah (King Cobra)
(☆1979☆
[Cray-1
Walkman
Cell phone])
Sesame Street
Charging bull
Fearless girl
Iguana iguana
53 area codes of Washington, D.C.
(Katy and I)
50
Edweard I
L
VO, OV
The
Statue of Liberty
You
Hit parade
Lumbini
Dubai
Miami
(Borough of Manhattan) New York City
Atlanta
Houston
Honolulu
Los Angeles
Chicago
Tokyo
Sidney
Bixby
Washington D.C.
Bethlehem
Mecca
Tokyo
Warsaw
Berlin
Peru
Mexico
Etc.
Wealth
Secundus
Rich
Cehii
Pullus
Sec(o)ndus
☆Verna May Barton
b. (June 22, 1917)
☆1917 ☆Techincolor invented or introduced.
☆Espionage Act of 1917 (June 14th, 1917)
☆Invention, (1917): Gilbert Vernam
American cryptographer (1890–1960)
Gilbert Sandford Vernam was a Worcester Polytechnic Institute 1914 graduate and AT&T Bell Labs engineer who, in 1917, invented an additive polyalphabetic stream cipher and later co-invented an automated one-time pad cipher. Vernam proposed a teleprinter cipher in which a previously prepared key, kept on paper tape, is combined character by character with the plaintext message to produce the ciphertext
Ankh
Henkel
☆Kehts
Hinkel may have been first known at 600’s a.d. (“Throne” origin) (Red Wine, also.) A somewhat wild guesstimate, that’s when the word “throne” came into existence, and it has an “h”. “Twice” is Old English, pre-1150.
Jessica
☆”Tree”
☆Second
☆”Theater”
☆Secundo
Broadway
(mens-dhe: Mind, to set)
Grizzly bear
Lone Star
Red Stripe
“Psichi-omega”
10,000 cities
Regions
7 seas
International Code Council (ICC)
Chuckie Edward Hinkel the second
Chicken raw-egg chicken rooster
Summer
Winter
Autumn
Spring
Crazy
Theatrical
Theater
Star1
Einheitsmatrix
Dna
Transliteration of Russian Cyrillic Alphabet:
a,b,v,g,d,e,yo,zh,z,i,y,k,l,m,n,o,p,r,s,t,уu,f,хkh,ts,ch,shshchy,e,yu, ya
The Pentagon
Edo
Second
Tokyo (Katy)
(Same)
It’s “plausible” that Henry the Fowler knew/used the word “Hinkel”, meaning “Chicken”.
“Kaiserlich freie weltliche Reichsstift Quedlinburg”
XXX
Karma
Sexual fantasy
“If”=II.
-Ton
Le proporzioni del corpo umano secondo Vitruvio
Grand finale
(Earl Edward)
a.i.
Penny, nickel, dime, quarter, half dollar, dollar.
“The draft”
Name of piece that contains first use of “united”(Richard Hubloet(1552):
Abcedarium anglico latinum, pro tyrunculis Richardo Hulœto exscriptore
“Penuel” or “Peniel”: Hebrew, “Face of God”
“This too shall pass”
Seneca sodi
“Romeo and Juliet”, William Shakespeare first uses the phrase:
“I love you”?
Geoffrey Chaucer (early use of “won” 1300’s:
To lyven in delit was evere his won;
For he was Epicurus owen son.”
The first sentence that includes the word “cyberspace” from William Gibson’s (1984) Neuromancer is: Cyberspace.
A consensual hallucination experienced daily by billions of legitimate operators, in every nation.”
Is Charles and Edward the nos ?w/Teddy?
Earliest use of “not”, (1299 a.d.):
“Þet heo ne dorste not speken for drede.”
“Ich kan” (1384 a.d.):
“I can.”
Chaucer, “can”: (1384 a.d.)
“For i can not.”
“Know”, (700-1000 a.d.) Beowulf:
“Þæt wæs geatolic, þæt ic þine frēond wisse.”
“Canton” first use (1533 a.d.) by John Bourchier, 2nd of Berners:
“It is noticeable that the first shield has no hatchment, but is party per bend and in the sinister base a canton.”
Caedmon’s hymn (7th c.) Lie as in rest:
“Heó lióðo lēoht”
“Lie” (1380’s a.d.) as in: to deceive, Chaucer:
“But I will telle you a laboure, / A lyf to that I have yequely.”
“Sony” company name (romanized):
Sonī Gurūpu kabushiki-gaisha
Nu scylun hergan hefaenricaes U scyppend, / Metudæs mahtan, / and his modgeþanc, / uæt he in geāra / æfre ænigum sīðean.”
“soul” (750-775 a.d.)
Vespasian Psalter:
“Non pepercit a morte animabus eorum : n[e] spearede from deaðe sawlum heara.”
(1390 a.d.) “zodiac”:
“Ther ben signes tuelve, Whiche have her cercles be hemselve Compassed in the zodiaque.”
J. Gower, Confessio Amantis
First use of “India” (1586) Edinburgh Testaments:
“Item, ane stand of coppar with ane cover of the wark of India.”
Beowulf “sun” (8th-10th c.)
“Siþþan morgenleoht ofer ylda bearn oþres dogores, sunne sweglwered suþan scineð.”
“diamond” (14 c.)
JOHN MANDEVILLE:
“Of the Iseland of Formosa: and they have great diamonds.”
(Flag components):
field emblem border horse
canton fly fringe
(Parts of coats of arms):
“Sheild supporters crest motto compartment tinctures charges”
(Ivy schools):
Brown, Columbia,
Cornell, Dartmouth, Harvard,
Princeton, Rutgers
Pennsylvania,
Yale
Earliest usage of “three”, William of Malmesbury, (early 12 c.):
“For þrye siðas he wæs fordrifen.”
“Lucky”
(1478)
“I schaull do my beste therto, and ther cum a locky man.”
“Troy” Layamon’s Brut, (1205 a.d.)
“Æfter þan þe Troie was fordon, þa wes Æneas mid his folke wide fordrifen.”
Two eight one seven eight two two nine seven
Moretum
Christ
Zero
B.C.
Ai (eye I): II
IT (one tee): United
“Voice” in text named “St. Francis”:
(1270-1285 ad)
“A vois com fram heuene þat seide to him þus.”
(990 a.d.) “it”. “Hit wæs ofer þæne stan getrymed.” West Saxon Gospels
1417 will containing the word “guardian” (spelled gardian in Middle English):
“Also I make and ordeyne Thomas Barwe to be gardian of my children, and he to have for his labour vjs. viijd.”
“the royal we” (((mainly: Edward, Charles. II),
(1417 ad) sentence containing the word “guardian”:
“Also I make and ordeyne Thomas Barwe to be gardian of my children, and he to have for his labour vjs. viijd.”
Also, though: Hinkel, “the II”, Ted) imparticularly, yet individually (?))
(Nos)
“This first royal we, which associated the French with the prosperity of this family, was a most bitter pill to me.”
“Early use of “fame”, (mid to late 14th c.):
“In days of old there lived, of mighty fame, A valiant Prince, and Theseus was his name;”
(You’re right “Theseus” does appear to be “the Zeus”, I think that’s to be me.
vexillology
Carbon
Diamond
Apohen
A phone
Brain damage
Canton
Cehts
Secundus
Apocalypse (Now)
Victim
Dies Natalis Solis Invicti
Techno
House
Rock
Pop
Jazz
Paparrazzi: Edward (II)
Via
Sound
Ec
Henkel
Hall of Fame
He/(i)nkel zodiac
☆lcsavlo☆
JHWFPC1C2
HyperText Markup Language
Mosfet
Dot
Com
Silver ring thing
Throne
Circle
Church
Chapel
Flavors that make up quarks:
up, down, charm, strange, top, and bottom.
H2O
IT
50/50
Award
Hall of Fame
epistemology
Cinematography
Me llamo Carlitos. ¿Como estaś? Muy been. ¿Y tú? Muy mal.
¿Como tè llamas?
Me Llama Lalo.
Què Pasa.
Hasta luego. Hasta Man̈ana.
Buenos dias.
Buenos noches.
Carolus Americus Eadpeard Hinkel Secundus
Bold
I was born 723,520.397250476190476 days > 0 b.c.
performance space
News
Cehs
Ted
Ward II
Earl II
United
PhD.
(Doctor of Philosophy)
Semi truck
Truck
Van
Suv
Car
Cvhs
Mundus Naevus
Cescehts
karilaz
Audawarduz
O, ae, ces
Shakespeare:
“What’s in a name?”
Earth
heart
Heat
Cold
Hot
hall of fame
Western Hemisphere
Quintillionn
Momma
Man
☆”mom”, 1846☆
From:
The Spirit of the Times, a publication focused on topics like sports, agriculture, and literature.
10/6
Ts&Os
Twin
Her
Flag
National Honor Society
Wealth of Nations
In days of old there lived, of mighty fame, A valiant Prince, and Theseus was his name;”
This quote introduces the character Theseus in “The Knight’s Tale”.
vexillology
Carbon
Diamond
Apohen
A phone
Brain damage
Canton
Cehts
Secundus
Apocalypse (Now)
Victim
Dies Natalis Solis Invicti
Techno
House
Rock
Pop
Jazz
Paparrazzi: Edward (II)
Via
Sound
Ec
Henkel
Hall of Fame
He/(i)nkel zodiac
☆lcsavlo☆
JHWFPC1C2
HyperText Markup Language
Mosfet
Dot
Com
Silver ring thing
Throne
Circle
Church
Chapel
Flavors that make up quarks:
up, down, charm, strange, top, and bottom.
H2O
IT
50/50
Award
epistemology
Cinematography
Me llamo Carlitos. ¿Como estaś? Muy been. ¿Y tú? Muy mal.
¿Como tè llamas?
Me Llama Lalo.
Què Pasa.
Hasta luego. Hasta Man̈ana.
Buenos dias.
Buenos noches.
Carolus Americus Eadpeard Hinkel Secundus
Bold
I was born 723,520.397250476190476 days > 0 b.c.
performance space
News
Cehs
Ted
Ward II
Earl II
United
PhD.
(Doctor of Philosophy)
Semi truck
Truck
Van
Suv
Car
Cvhs
Mundus Naevus
Cescehts
karilaz
Audawarduz
O, ae, ces
Shakespeare:
“What’s in a name?”
Earth
heart
Heat
Cold
Hot
hall of fame
Relient K
Western Hemisphere
Quintillionn
Momma
Man
☆”mom”, 1846☆
From:
The Spirit of the Times, a publication focused on topics like sports, agriculture, and literature.
10/6
Ts&Os
Twin
Her
Flag
National Honor Society
Wealth of Nations
The word “romance” appears in Havelok the Dane around 1300. Here are two translations that capture the essence of its use:
Original Middle English Version
“Þat ich wole of romancen telle.”
Earliest use of “bed”:
West Saxon Gospels, 990 ad:
“Aris, nim þin bed & ga.”
Earliest use of “magazine” (1731):
Title:
“The Gentle-man’s magazine; or, Trader’s monthly intelligencer.”
Blu-ray
Blur-t, “o-blurb”, lay rub
“She climbs into classy cars that speed off in a blur.”
A blurb is a short descriptive published tidbit?
Eyeglasses
1 second
United
Second I
“I second”
Contact lenses
Lasik
“Arcadia”, translation of Theocritus (3 c. B.c.)
“Come hither, O man, to Arcadia, where Pan sings and eho answers.”
“Arcadia”- 1480’s
Jacopo Sannazaro:
“Giace nella sommità di Partenio, non umile monte de la pastorale Arcadia, un dilettevole piano, di ampiezza non molto spazioso però che il sito del luogo nol consente, ma di minuta e verdissima erbetta sì ripieno, che se le lascive pecorelle con gli avidi morsi non vi pascesseno, vi si potrebbe di ogni tempo ritrovare verdura.”
“Ten Years’ Exile”
Published posthumously (1810-1816 a.d.) first recorded use of “Royal We”.
Germaine de Staël-Holstein
“This first royal we, which associated the French with the prosperity of this family, was a most bitter pill to me.”
5 types of brain waves: Delta, Theta, Alpha, Beta, Gamma
12 Roman Dieties
Jupiter Juno Neptune Minerva Mars Venus Apollo DianaVulcanVesta Mercury Ceres
UN member states:
Algeria
Angola
Benin
Botswana
Burkina Faso
Burundi
Cabo Verde
Cameroon
Central African Republic
Chad
Comoros
Democratic Republic of the Congo
Republic of the Congo
Djibouti
Egypt
Equatorial Guinea
Eritrea
Eswatini
Ethiopia
Gabon
Gambia
Ghana
Guinea
Guinea-Bissau
Ivory Coast
Kenya
Lesotho
Liberia
Libya
Madagascar
Malawi
Mali
Mauritania
Mauritius
Morocco
Mozambique
Namibia
Niger
Nigeria
Rwanda
São Tomé and Príncipe
Senegal
Seychelles
Sierra Leone
Somalia
South Africa
South Sudan
Sudan
Tanzania
Togo
Tunisia
Uganda
Zambia
Zimbabwe
Afghanistan
Armenia
Azerbaijan
Bahrain
Bangladesh
Bhutan
Brunei
Cambodia
China
Cyprus
Georgia
India
Indonesia
Iran
Iraq
Israel
Japan
Jordan
Kazakhstan
Kuwait
Kyrgyzstan
Laos
Lebanon
Malaysia
Maldives
Mongolia
Myanmar
Nepal
North Korea
Oman
Pakistan
Palestine
Philippines
Qatar
Saudi Arabia
Singapore
South Korea
Sri Lanka
Syria
Tajikistan
Thailand
Turkmenistan
United Arab Emirates
Uzbekistan
Vietnam
Yemen
Albania
Andorra
Austria
Belarus
Belgium
Bosnia and Herzegovina
Bulgaria
Croatia
Cyprus
Czech Republic
Denmark
Estonia
Finland
France
Germany
Greece
Hungary
Iceland
Ireland
Italy
Latvia
Liechtenstein
Lithuania
Luxembourg
Malta
Moldova
Monaco
Montenegro
Netherlands
North Macedonia
Norway
Poland
Portugal
Romania
Russia
San Marino
Serbia
Slovakia
Slovenia
Spain
Sweden
Switzerland
Ukraine
United Kingdom
Antigua and Barbuda
Argentina
Bahamas
Barbados
Belize
Bolivia
Brazil
Chile
Colombia
Costa Rica
Cuba
Dominica
Dominican Republic
Ecuador
El Salvador
Grenada
Guatemala
Guyana
Haiti
Honduras
Jamaica
Mexico
Nicaragua
Panama
Paraguay
Peru
Saint Kitts and Nevis
Saint Lucia
Saint Vincent and the Grenadines
Suriname
Trinidad and Tobago
Uruguay
Venezuela
Canada
United States
Australia
Fiji
Kiribati
Marshall Islands
Micronesia
Nauru
New Zealand
Palau
Papua New Guinea
Samoa
Solomon Islands
Tonga
Tuvalu
Vanuatu
Academic Buildings at Harvard University:
Widener Library Science and Engineering Complex Harvard Medical School Bauer Life Sciences Building Sherman Fairchild Biochemistry Lab
Alabama, Alaska, Arizona, Arkansas, California, Colorado, Connecticut, Delaware, Florida, Georgia, Hawaii, Idaho, Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Kansas, Kentucky, Louisiana, Maine, Maryland, Massachusetts, Michigan, Minnesota, Mississippi, Missouri, Montana, Nebraska, Nevada, New Hampshire, New Jersey, New Mexico, New York, North Carolina, North Dakota, Ohio, Oklahoma, Oregon, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, South Carolina, South Dakota, Tennessee, Texas, Utah, Vermont, Virginia, Washington, West Virginia, Wisconsin, Wyoming.
7x total (cehphccehts)
Area Codes of Texas
world wide web
(st. peter’s basilica)
computer animation
Baseball positions:
1 (pitcher), 2 (catcher), 3 (first baseman), 4 (second baseman), 5 (third baseman), 6 (shortstop), 7 (left fielder), 8 (center fielder), and 9 (right fielder)
bitcoin
bitcoin
bitcoin
INVENTORI LUCIS SOLI INVICTO AUGUSTO
strings, woodwinds, brass, percussion
Violin, Viola, Cello, Double Bass, Harp Flute, Oboe, Clarinet, Bassoon, Piccolo, English Horn Trumpet, Trombone, French Horn, Tuba Timpani, Snare Drum, Bass Drum, Cymbals, Xylophone, Marimba, Triangle, Tambourine
cehscehts
cehscehts
cehscehts
3 t’s
3 o’s
Rock band pieces:
lead vocalist, guitarist, bassist, drummer
(cehts)
lead vocalist guitarist bassist drummer keyboardist
California Area Codes:
boi, bac, cao, cbc, doh, dae, dbd, eao, eco,eei, efb, fai, fbf, feo, ffa, ffi, gog, gad, gdg gfo, hoe, hah, hca, heh, ioi, iaf, ibe, idi iea
list of countries of Asia in alphabetical order
south america
Provinces of China
Countries of Oceania plus australia
Provinces/territories of Canada
Countries/provinces of Europe
Carolus Eadpeard Secundo
Classical Latin Alphabet
A, B, C, D, E, F, G, H, I, K, L, M, N, O, P, Q, R, S, T, U, V
Old Latin Alphabet
A B C D E F G H I K L M N O P Q R S T V X
Kokuritsu Kenkyū Kaihatsu Hōjin Rikagaku Kenkyūsho
Essential (0mputer Parts:
central processing unit motherboard hard drive power supply unit graphics card keybeboard mouse
cirrus cirrocumulus cirrostratus altocumulus altostratus nimbostratus cumulus cumulonimbus stratocumulus stratus
Nazi
peninsula
The list of numbers from Revelation (alphanumerically).
ceaoooaddooodocobdbbbaboaiahagafaeadacabaaaoihgfedcba
Co-Creators and owners of the SAME. Unite.
Katheryn Elizabeth Hudson;Charles Edward Hinkel the Second
(Sun and Moon Empire (SAME-(United)))
Comisky Park Dimensions:
347′ 382′ 409′ 86′ 8′ 10′ 10′
Deutschland States:
Baden-Württemberg
Bayern (Bavaria)
Berlin
Brandenburg
Bremen
Hamburg
Hessen (Hesse)
Mecklenburg-Vorpommern
Niedersachsen (Lower Saxony)
Nordrhein-Westfalen (North Rhine-Westphalia)
Rheinland-Pfalz (Rhineland-Palatinate)
Saarland
Sachsen (Saxony)
Sachsen-Anhalt (Saxony-Anhalt)
Schleswig-Holstein
Thüringen (Thuringia)
cehsphccehts
cehsphccehts
Eastern Conference:
Atlantic Division: Boston Celtics, Brooklyn Nets, New York Knicks, Philadelphia 76ers, Toronto Raptors
Central Division: Chicago Bulls, Cleveland Cavaliers, Detroit Pistons, Indiana Pacers, Milwaukee Bucks
Southeast Division: Atlanta Hawks, Charlotte Hornets, Miami Heat, Orlando Magic, Washington Wizards
Western Conference:
Northwest Division: Denver Nuggets, Minnesota Timberwolves, Oklahoma City Thunder, Portland Trail Blazers, Utah Jazz
Pacific Division: Golden State Warriors, Los Angeles Clippers, Los Angeles Lakers, Phoenix Suns, Sacramento Kings
Southwest Division: Dallas Mavericks, Houston Rockets, Memphis Grizzlies, New Orleans Pelicans, San Antonio Spurs
Farsi Language
ll(Alef) – a (as in “father”)
و (Vav) – o (as in “go”) or u (as in “put”)
ی (Yeh) – i (as in “machine”)
Consonants
ب (Be) – b
پ (Pe) – p
ت (Te) – t
ث (Se) – s
ج (Jim) – j
چ (Che) – ch
خ (Khe) – kh (a guttural sound)
د (Dal) – d
ذ (Zal) – z
ر (Re) – r
ز (Ze) – z
ژ (Zhe) – zh (as in “measure”)
س (Sin) – s
ش (Shin) – sh
ص (Sad) – s
ط (Ta) – t
ظ (Za) – z
ع (Ayn) – ‘ (a glottal stop)
غ (Ghayn) – gh (a guttural sound)
ف (Fe) – f
ق (Qaf) – q (or gh in some contexts)
ک (Kaf) – k
گ (Gaf) – g
ل (Lam) – l
م (Mim) – m
ن (Noon) – n
و (Vav) – v
Football, defense:
safeties cornerbacks outside linebackers middle linebacker ends tackles
Football, offense:
guards tackles center quarterback running backs tight end wide receivers
galli
gallow
galley
gallus
scybale
moretum
charles E.M. Hinkel II
C.E.M.H.t.ii
Golf terms:
fairway green bunker tee club
ace birdie bogey albatross condor
backswing follow-through approach shot chip putt
Caddie fore mulligan handicap
Greek Alphabet
Αα Alpha Νν Nu
Ββ Beta Ξξ Xi
Γγ Gamma Οο Omicron
Δδ Delta Ππ Pi
Εε Epsilon Ρρ Rho
Ζζ Zeta Σσς Sigma
Ηη Eta Ττ Tau
Θθ Theta Υυ Upsilon
Ιι Iota Φφ Phi
Κκ Kappa Χχ Chi
Λλ Lambda Ψψ Psi
Μμ Mu Ωω Omega
cesphccehs
cesphccehs
Greek Alphabet:
Alpha Beta Gamma Delta Epsilon Zeta Eta Theta Iota Kappa Lambda Mu Nu Xi Omicron Pi Rho Sigma Tau Upsilon Phi Chi Psi Omega x2
Ancient Akkadian cuneiform alphabet: x2
naasasugalkimumaribadsiuimkamandingir biirrauddimniashalmugzususunkabalaadgukuusharadassurititarbuizadminbal
Huizi, Jiaozi, Qianyin, Guanzi
Hymn to the United Nations
E E F G G F E D
C C D E E D D
E E F G G F E D
C C D E D C C
Carolus Eadpeard Hinkel Secundo
Infield Dimensions, MLB:
90′ 90′ 90′ 90′ 60′ 6″ 6″
World Federation of Exchanges (WFE),
Federation Internationale des Bourses de Valeurs (FIBV)
The planets in the solar system
Stars that make up the “Big Dipper”:
Dubhe, Merak, Phecda, Megrez, Alioth, Mizar, and Alkaid
International Soccer Positions:
goalkeeper, center-backs, full-backs, wing-backs, central midfielders, wingers, strikers center-forwards
Football Association
International Society for Neurochemistry
Ipad camera measuring capability
Microsoft Real world flight simulation-
Piercing technique
Thumb through sleeve-hole popularized
Smart Cities
Spheredawn
Car stereo interconnectivity
Aichi 5
Akita 1, 5
Aomori 17
Chiba 4
Ehime 2, 8
Fukui 77
Fukuoka 7, 9
Fukushima 2, 8
Gifu 5, 7
Gunma 27
Hiroshima 8
Hokkaido 1
Hyogo 7
Ibaraki 2
Ishikawa 76
Iwate 19
Kagawa 87
Kagoshima 99
Kanagawa 4
Kochi 88
Kumamoto 96
Kyoto 7
Mie 59
Miyagi 22
Miyazaki 98
Nagano 26
Nagasaki 95
Nara 74
Niigata 25
Oita 97
Okayama 86
Okinawa 98
Osaka 6, 7
Saga 95
Saitama 4
Shiga 7
Shimane 85
Shizuoka 5
Tochigi 28
Tokushima 8
Tokyo 3
Tottori 85
Toyama 76
Wakayama 73
Yamagata 23
Yamaguchi 7, 8
Yamanashi 55
Liu (劉), Guan (關), Zhang (張), Zhao
Lung Kong (龍岡), Mu Tin (睦親), Ming Yee (名義)
(Charles Edward Hinkel the Second)
King of Romance
King of Energy
moneta
1 sec. (me)
60s. 1 min
60m. 1 hour
24h. 1 day
7 d. 1 week
4 w. 1 month
12m. 1 year
10y. 1 decade
10d. 1 century
10c. 1 millennium
cehs
NFC North:
Chicago Bears, Detroit Lions, Green Bay Packers, Minnesota Vikings
NFC South:
Atlanta Falcons, Carolina Panthers, New Orleans Saints, Tampa Bay Buccaneers
NFC West:
Arizona Cardinals, Los Angeles Rams, San Francisco 49ers, Seattle Seahawks.
AFC East:
Buffalo Bills, Miami Dolphins, New England Patriots, New York Jets
AFC North:
Baltimore Ravens, Cincinnati Bengals, Cleveland Browns, Pittsburgh Steelers
AFC South:
Houston Texans, Indianapolis Colts, Jacksonville Jaguars, Tennessee Titans
AFC West:
Denver Broncos, Kansas City Chiefs, Las Vegas Raiders, Los Angeles Chargers
One of the most complex scientific equations in modern science is the Navier-Stokes equations, which describe the behavior of fluid flow, including turbulent patterns. The equation is:
(4x our name + “too”)
“Partial derivative of velocity with respect to time plus the velocity dotted with the gradient operator acting on velocity equals negative one over density times the gradient of pressure plus viscosity times the Laplacian operator acting on velocity plus body forces.”
Megaprimatus kong
parts of the brain:
cerebrum, cerebellum, and brainstem
frontal lobe parietal lobe temporal lobe occipital lobe
Queen, We Are the Champions:
E E E G# A E
E E E G# A B
C# C# B A G# E
E E E G# A E
Teeth names:
incisors canines premolars molars
elements on the periodic table
The “Bridal Chorus” from Wagner’s “Lohengrin” is typically played in the key of B major. Here are the notes for the main melody in order:
B
D♯
F♯
G♯
B
A♯
B
D♯
F♯
G♯
B
A♯
B
D♯
F♯
G♯
B
The Emperors of Rome
The Hebrew Language
Alef, Bet, Gimel, Dalet, He, Vav, Zayin, Chet, Tet, Yod, Kaf, Lamed, Mem, Nun, Samech, Ayin, Pe, Tzadi, Kuf, Resh, Shin, Tav.
cehsphccehts
The New World Order
A
Afghanistan
Alabama
Alaska
Albania
Algeria
Andorra
Angola
Antigua and Barbuda
Argentina
Arizona
Arkansas
Armenia
Australia
Austria
Azerbaijan
B
The Bahamas
Bahrain
Bangladesh
Barbados
Belarus
Belgium
Belize
Benin
Bhutan
Bolivia
Bosnia and Herzegovina
Botswana
Brazil
Brunei
Bulgaria
Burkina Faso
Burundi
C
Cabo Verde
California
Cambodia
Cameroon
Canada
Central African Republic
Chad
Chile
China
Colombia
Colorado
Comoros
Congo, Democratic Republic of the
Congo, Republic of the
Connecticut
Costa Rica
Côte d’Ivoire
Croatia
Cuba
Cyprus
Czech Republic
D
Delaware
Denmark
Djibouti
Dominica
Dominican Republic
E
East Timor (Timor-Leste)
Ecuador
Egypt
El Salvador
Equatorial Guinea
Eritrea
Estonia
Eswatini
Ethiopia
F
Fiji
Finland
Florida
France
G
Gabon
The Gambia
Georgia (of the U.N.?)
Georgia
Germany
Ghana
Greece
Grenada
Guatemala
Guinea
Guinea-Bissau
Guyana
H
Haiti
Hawaii
Honduras
Hungary
I
Iowa
Iceland
Idaho
Illinois
India
Indiana
Indonesia
Iran
Iraq
Ireland
Israel
Italy
J
Jamaica
Japan
Jordan
K
Kansas
Kazakhstan
Kentucky
Kenya
Kiribati
Korea, North
Korea, South
Kosovo
Kuwait
Kyrgyzstan
L
Laos
Latvia
Lebanon
Lesotho
Liberia
Libya
Liechtenstein
Lithuania
Louisiana
Luxembourg
M
Madagascar
Maine
Malawi
Malaysia
Maldives
Mali
Malta
Marshall Islands
Maryland
Massachusetts
Mauritania
Mauritius
Mexico
Michigan
Micronesia, Federated States of
Minnesota
Mississippi
Missouri
Moldova
Monaco
Mongolia
Montana
Montenegro
Morocco
Mozambique
Myanmar (Burma)
N
Namibia
Nauru
Nebraska
Nepal
Netherlands
Nevada
New Hampshire
New Jersey
New Mexico
New York
New Zealand
Nicaragua
Niger
Nigeria
North Carolina
North Dakota
North Macedonia
Norway
O
Ohio
Oklahoma
Oman
Oregon
P
Pakistan
Palau
Panama
Papua New Guinea
Paraguay
Pennsylvania
Peru
Philippines
Poland
Portugal
Q
Qatar
R
Rhode Island
Romania
Russia
Rwanda
S
Saint Kitts and Nevis
Saint Lucia
Saint Vincent and the Grenadines
Samoa
San Marino
Sao Tome and Principe
Saudi Arabia
Senegal
Serbia
Seychelles
Sierra Leone
Singapore
Slovakia
Slovenia
Solomon Islands
Somalia
South Africa
South Carolina
South Dakota
Spain
Sri Lanka
Sudan
Sudan, South
Suriname
Sweden
Switzerland
Syria
T
Taiwan
Tajikistan
Tanzania
Tennessee
Texas
Thailand
Togo
Tonga
Trinidad and Tobago
Tunisia
Turkey
Turkmenistan
Tuvalu
U
Uganda
Ukraine
United Arab Emirates
United Kingdom
Uruguay
Utah
Uzbekistan
V
Vanuatu
Vatican City
Venezuela
Vermont
Vietnam
Virginia
W
Washington
West Virginia
Wisconsin
Wyoming
Y
Yemen
Z
Zambia
Zimbabwe
The top ten highest-grossing movies of all time are:
Avatar – $2.92 billion
Avengers: Endgame – $2.80 billion
Avatar: The Way of Water – $2.34 billion
Titanic – $2.26 billion
Ne Zha 2 – $2.15 billion
Star Wars: Episode VII – The Force Awakens – $2.07 billion
Avengers: Infinity War – $2.05 billion
Spider-Man: No Way Home – $1.98 billion
Inside Out 2 – $1.70 billion
Jurassic World – $1.67 billion
the twenty three provinces of china, and taiwan
cehs phc cehts
cehs phc cehts
the Winthrop Fleet, which included the ships:
Arabella, Ambrose, Talbot, Jewell, Charles, Mayflower, William & Frances, Hopewell, Whale, Success, Trial.
There are twelve Federal Reserve Banks in the United States, each serving a specific district:
Wikipedia
2x
Federal Reserve Bank of Boston
Federal Reserve Bank of New York
Federal Reserve Bank of Philadelphia
Federal Reserve Bank of Cleveland
Federal Reserve Bank of Richmond
Federal Reserve Bank of Atlanta
Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago
Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis
Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis
Federal Reserve Bank of Kansas City
Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas
Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco
Therizinosaurus cheloniformis
(large evolutionary ancestor of the chicken)
TIME ZONES (GLOBAL)
Greenwich Mean Time UTC+0
Central European Time UTC+1
Eastern European Time UTC+2
Moscow Standard Time UTC+3
Gulf Standard Time UTC+4
Pakistan Standard Time UTC+5
India Standard Time UTC+5:30
Bangladesh Standard Time UTC+6
Indochina Time UTC+7
China Standard Time UTC+8
Japan Standard Time UTC+9
Australian Eastern Standard Time UTC+10
Solomon Islands Time UTC+11
New Zealand Standard Time UTC+12
Samoa Standard Time UTC-11
Hawaii-Aleutian Standard Time UTC-10
Alaskan Standard Time UTC-9
Pacific Standard Time UTC-8
Mountain Standard Time UTC-7
Central Standard Time UTC-6
Eastern Standard Time
Transliteration of Nepalese Language: (cehscehts) (12 vowels 33 consonants)
United States (NASA)
Russia (Roscosmos)
Canada (CSA)
Japan (JAXA)
European Space Agency (ESA)
time-out
3 Soveriegns and 5 Emperors
Tiānhuáng Dàdì (天皇大帝) or “The Supreme God of Heaven.”
basketball positions:
point guard
shooting guard
small forward
power forward
center
Zhōngguó Kōngjiān Jìshù Yánjiūyuàn
China Academy of Space Technology