Wikipedia

Search results

Saturday, November 30, 2019



9 - 13 Hz Α, α, ἄλφαálpha, derived from the Phoenician and Hebrew letter aleph Aleph - an ox or leader
4 - 8   Hz
> 30   Hz

Neural oscillations, or brainwaves

alpha wave (7–15 Hz), theta (4–8 Hz), beta (13–30 Hz), low gamma (30–70 Hz), and high gamma (70–150 Hz) frequency bands

alpha waves indicate idleness
gamma-band oscillations explain the heightened sense of consciousness, bliss, and intellectual acuity subsequent to meditation; the aptitude for one to produce gamma-band rhythm is trainable
increased theta waves have been seen in humans in 'no thought' meditation

אג Hebrew lemma (unconfined capacity)
אַגַּן  (aganm
  1. a basin: a bowl
  2. a basin: a low area geographically
    אגן ים תיכון‎‎
    the Mediterranean Basin
    אגן האבק‎‎
    Dust Bowl
אַגָּס  (agásm (plural indefinite אַגָּסִים‎, singular construct אַגַּס־)
  1. pear, a fruit borne by trees of the genus Pyrus, and especially the cultivated species Pyrus communis.
  2. A pear tree, a tree that bears such a fruit.
  3. Genus Pyrus, the genus of such trees.
  4. (slang) An electric light bulb.
אָגַר  (agár) (pa'al constructionpassive counterpart נֶאֱגַר‎)
  1. to hoard, to store, to accumulate, to gather
אֲגַם  (agámm
  1. lake
אגו  (egom
  1. ego
אג'ח securities, debentures
אגח   אגרת חוב acronym for bearer bonds







An ear, אניר אג.

Etymology

From Proto-Germanic *augô, via Old Frisian wikt:āge

Pronunciation

(Weddish*) IPA: /adʒ/

Noun

אַּג ('āj) - animate feminine antinomic noun
  1. eye
  2. eyeball

Notes

This word is in the antinomic, which means it automatically refers to one-of-two. For "eyes" in the sense of "two", use איג/'eyj. For a lone eye (as in the eye of a needle, or a storm), use אגר/'ājěr. For a lot of eyeballs (as of a creature with many eyes), use איגא/'eyja'.

* Weddish began as a dialect of w: Old Frisian, which fell under the influence of its Welsh-speaking neighbours (unlike its Anglo-Saxon kin). It was "conquered" by Jews in 1066, and "freed" by the w: Edict of Expulsion in 1290, and so returned to being under Welsh influence. English has exerted some small sway over its development.
Weddish is a w: West Germanic language spoken by several small communities within w: Wales and several large ones within the United States. Approximately 40,000 people speak Weddish as their L1. It is of considerable interest to linguists and ethnographers, because of its complex history and unique place in the world.

  • H1523 גיל ּולּג ּgîyl gûl gheel, gool A primitive root; properly to spin around (under the influence of any violent emotion), that is, usually rejoice, or (as cringing) fear: - be glad, joy, be joyful, rejoice.
  • H1524 גיל ּgîyl gheel From H1523; a revolution (of time, that is, an age); also joy: - X exceedingly, gladness, X greatly, joy, rejoice (-ing), sort.
  • H1525 גילה ּגילת ּgîylâh gîylath ghee-law', ghee-lath' Feminine of H1524; joy: - joy, rejoicing.
  • H1534 גלּגל ּgalgal gal-gal' By reduplication from H1556; a wheel; by analogy a whirlwind; also dust (as whirled): - heaven, rolling thing, wheel.
  • H1535 גלּגל ּgalgal gal-gal' (Chaldee); corresponding to H1534; a wheel: - wheel.
  • H1536 גלּגל ּgilgâl ghil-gawl' A variation of H1534: - wheel.
  • H1537 גלּגל ּgilgâl ghil-gawl' The same as H1536 (with the article as a properly noun); Gilgal, the name of three places in Palestine: - Gilgal. See also H1019.
  • H1540 גלה ּgâlâh gaw-law' A primitive root; to denude (especially in a disgraceful sense); by implication to exile (captives being usually stripped); figuratively to reveal: - + advertise, appear, bewray, bring, (carry, lead, go) captive (into captivity), depart, disclose, discover, exile, be gone, open, X plainly, publish, remove, reveal, X shamelessly, shew, X surely, tell, uncover. gּ גלא ּגלה
  • H1541 e lâh ge lâ' ghel-aw', ghel-aw' (Chaldee); corresponding to H1540: - bring over, carry away, reveal.




No comments: