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Wednesday, February 9, 2022

Eau de Lourdes
Lourdes aqua
VA BOIRE ET TE LAVER À CETTE FONTAINE


North Pole energies cause the mass to contract and condense, rotating in a CCW direction
North Pole energies have alkaline properties
North pole energy is referred to as negative because it ䷨損41 reduces or attracts
North pole energies tend to collect fluids
CCW
 西  Sedona Arizona Long -111.760826 W  ♋︎  Lourdes Ariège Longitude 0° 03' 0.00" E 東

CW
South pole energies dissipate fluids
South pole energy is referred to as positive because it ䷩益42 expands and dissipates
South Pole energy is acid
South Pole energies cause the mass to expand and dissipate, rotating in a CW direction

Ari-ège
Ari-zona

Aurigera, aurum (“gold”) +‎ -ger (“bearing”) from
Proto-Indo-European *h₂é-h₂us-óm (“gold”), from *h₂ews- (“to dawn, become light, become red”).
L'Ariège (Aurigera) tire son nom de l'orpaillage que les Gaulois y pratiquaient.

Pré-1790 Carte du Bearn de la Bigorre, de l'Armagnac et des Pays Voisins, Guillaume Delisle
Gouvernements généraux de Languedoc, de Foix et de Roussillon, Robert de Vaugondy.

  Languedoc
  Comté de Foix
  Donezan (Foix)
  • Gascogne :
  Comminges
  Couserans

Arizona, O'odham: Alĭ ṣonak, Navajo: Hoozdo Hahoodzo (Navajo pronunciation: [hoː˥z̥to˩ ha˩hoː˩tso˩]) derived from the O'odham name alĭ ṣonak, meaning "small spring". Initially, this term was applied by Spanish colonists only to an area near the silver mining camp of Planchas de Plata, Sonora.
Another possible origin is the Basque phrase haritz ona ("the good oak"), as there were numerous Basque sheepherders in the area. A native Mexican of Basque ancestry established the ranchería (village) of Arizona between 1734 and 1736 in the current Mexican state of Sonora. It became notable after a significant discovery of silver there, c. 1737. One of the four states of the Four Corners region with Utah to the north, Colorado to the northeast, and New Mexico to the east.
[आर्य ā́rya, “noble; noble one”]
The Sanskrit word ā́rya (आर्य) was originally an ethnocultural term designating those who spoke Vedic Sanskrit and adhered to Vedic cultural norms (including religious rituals and poetry), in contrast to an outsider, or an-ā́rya ('non-Arya'). By the time of the Buddha (5th–4th century BCE), it took the meaning of 'noble'. In Old Iranian languages, the Avestan term airya (Old Persian ariya) was likewise used as an ethnocultural self-designation by ancient Iranian peoples, in contrast to an an-airya ('non-Arya'). It designated those who belonged to the 'Aryan' (Iranian) ethnic stock, spoke the language and followed the religion of the 'Aryas'.

These two terms derive from the reconstructed Proto-Indo-Iranian stem *Arya- or *āryo-, which was probably the name used by the prehistoric Indo-Iranian peoples to designate themselves as an ethnocultural group. The term did not have any racial connotation, which only emerged later in the works of 19th-century Western writers. According to David W. Anthony, "the Rigveda and Avesta agreed that the essence of their shared parental Indo-Iranian identity was linguistic and ritual, not racial. If a person sacrificed to the right gods in the right way using the correct forms of the traditional hymns and poems, that person was an Aryan.


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