I am aware. If the original text read HJA BÔSM and the word BÔSM was subsequently censored, then HJA would be considered a grammatical error, not unlike the other errors present in the manuscript.
Search found 78 matches
- 07 Jan 2025, 11:27
- Forum: Religion & Philosophy
- Topic: Wr.Aldas od
- Replies: 8
- Views: 405
- 06 Jan 2025, 09:10
- Forum: Religion & Philosophy
- Topic: Wr.Aldas od
- Replies: 8
- Views: 405
Re: Wr.Aldas od
The black rectangle on page 6 of the manuscript is arguably a form of censorship. The contrast of the following image has been enhanced to highlight this observation. THÁ HJA(RA) BÔSM BLÁT KÉMON.jpg It is possible to discern BO?M, which may be indicative of BÔSM, meaning "bosom," akin to O...
- 25 Dec 2024, 16:23
- Forum: Language & Etymology
- Topic: Origin of the Jutes
- Replies: 2
- Views: 207
Origin of the Jutes
A cordial Yuletide greeting is extended to all. Recent contemplation concerning the origins of the Jutes prompted me toward an examination of the Oera Linda Book, which offers a number of clues to the subject. The following is a direct quotation from chapter 47.06: Those who lived in the east of the...
- 14 Dec 2024, 12:55
- Forum: Religion & Philosophy
- Topic: the devine feminine is on the cutting edge of todays issues
- Replies: 2
- Views: 168
Re: the devine feminine is on the cutting edge of todays issues
It is possible that the Wifejak meme is merely an articulation of an innate human tendency. A relevant quotation from the video, located at the 15:45 mark, is provided below for reference: As much as these goddesses are symbols for human nature, so do Wifejak and memes generally also point to aspect...
- 13 Dec 2024, 16:57
- Forum: Religion & Philosophy
- Topic: A Germanic root for the Thesmophoria?
- Replies: 6
- Views: 415
Re: A Germanic root for the Thesmophoria?
In my thread dedicated to the reconstruction of a Fryas calendar, I cited the following passage from Bede's Reckoning of Time: [In olden time, the English people] began the year on the 8th kalends of January [25 December], when we celebrate the birth of the Lord. That very night, which we hold so sa...
- 08 Dec 2024, 09:01
- Forum: Authenticity Debate
- Topic: The Celtic question solved by Oera Linda book
- Replies: 9
- Views: 428
Re: The Celtic question solved by Oera Linda book
It is my hypothesis that the people from the Gobi Desert were the "Proto-Magyars," the ancestral group that migrated in various offshoots to India, Persia, and Eastern Europe after the 2194 BCE environmental disaster, also known as the 4.2 ka event. The OLB designates this region as Aldlan...
- 30 Nov 2024, 13:46
- Forum: Language & Etymology
- Topic: Misleading spellings and alternative transliteration
- Replies: 0
- Views: 130
Misleading spellings and alternative transliteration
The orthographic choices made in the Oera Linda Book are not consistently reliable, even for words that appear frequently. To illustrate this issue, consider the words GOD, TID, and WIF. The following section presents a preliminary analysis of the manuscript's usage of these words. GOD x49 TID x44, ...
- 17 Nov 2024, 15:32
- Forum: Language & Etymology
- Topic: Sunne vs. Sol
- Replies: 3
- Views: 229
Sunne vs. Sol
The following list contains direct ancestry. Fryas: SVNNE, SON: "Sun" Old Frisian: sunne, senne Frisian: sinne Old Saxon, Old High German: sunna German: Sonne Old English: sunne English: sun Old Norse: sunna (No longer used) Gothic: sunna, sunno (No longer used) The use of the term "s...
- 08 Nov 2024, 11:42
- Forum: Links
- Topic: The Spread of Archeological Cultures associated with Finno-Ugric languages.
- Replies: 2
- Views: 176
Re: The Spread of Archeological Cultures associated with Finno-Ugric languages.
The linguistic and cultural divide between the Sami, Finns, and Estonians in the west and their Siberian counterparts in the east aligns with the OLB narrative that posits the displacement of the Finns by another people, the Magyars, who are believed to have arrived from the Altai Mountains, a regio...
- 04 Nov 2024, 22:32
- Forum: Language & Etymology
- Topic: new theory on etymology of Wralda
- Replies: 3
- Views: 225
Re: new theory on etymology of Wralda
The phonetic similarity between "Wer-alda" and the Old German "man-old" is a mere coincidence. In the Fryas language, WR.ALDA was articulated as "weralda" or "waralda," despite the fact that WR-, as a prefix, is cognate with German ur- and über-. An investigat...