Celeste Claire Horner
Letters are Pictures!
W The letter W looks like a wave of water, and the w-sound is related to water words world-wide:
English: water, wave, wash, wet, dew, weep, well, wax (excludes water)
flow, fluid, liquid, swallow,
drown, thaw, straw, swirl, swim
wade, wake, wring, whirlpool
Spanish: agua, "agwa", water
French: eau, "ohw", water
Hawaiian: wai, water
Egyptian: mw, water
Chinese: 水 shuǐ, "shwi", water
Hopi walalata , waves
If you pursue the common threads of patterns between sound and meaning around the world, an alphabet symbology master key emerges which can overcome international communication barriers. With it, you can unlock the meaning, and reveal hidden beauty in languages across the world!
W is waving. W represents the waving action of water, and a bird's wing. It captures hips that sway and legs that swing while walking. Animated, w is wisps of grass, and stalks of wheat waving in the wind.
WIND
W swaying grass
i invisible, seed, fire
N changing, undulating, né
D gives, goes. D hand, cloud
==============
The invisible hand of the wind
sways the grass, wafts seeds,
breeds fires, whips up waves,
changes the clouds
WALK
W walking legs, insect upside-down
A 2 walking legs
L leg and foot
K 2 walking legs, kinetic
==============
spider on the ceiling, man on the ground
all those legs are walking all around!
W is wide and twisting. It depicts wide, whopping, whale-sized widths, widening, and wildness! W is also narrowing, winnowing, twisting, wringing, wrapping, squeezing, and wasting away. W is the top of the hourglass silhouette of the dancer with wasp-like waist, and a bouffant skirt which swirls and wraps around her, as she whirls, pirouettes, and waltzes.
W is a crown. The most eminent incarnation of W is the shape of the crown of a queen. W outlines the twinkling facets of her glowing jewels. W doubles as the opening petals of a wild flower, and the w-shaped spray of a cold mountain water shower. The out-flung arms of w embrace the widening glow of a rosy-hued dawn.
W = SH. The w is the plural indicator in Egyptian hieroglyphs. Its symbol is a quail chick, that could flap its itty-bitty W-shaped wings as it waddled around. It is appropriate that a symbol for water should indicate multiplicity because water is a chaotic crowd of molecules. Water in excess is a flood. The w in Egyptian is pronounced oo, or u, which are letters also related to water as in blood, and liquid, pour, and fluid. In hieroglyphs, water is represented by wig-wag lines, and transliterated MW, or NW. W is derived from the letter "shin" in Phoenician. The sh-sound occurs in water words such as wash, shore, shower, ocean, and sh, Egyptian for pool, and the Chinese word for water, 水 shuǐ.
"Shin" is teeth in Hebrew. W looks like formidable fangs in the upper jaw of a shark.
W & M. If you flip W upside down, you get a M, a primordial sound for all things necessary like mother and milk, and shaped like the upper lip of the mouth, and the waves of marine water out of which much life emerged! In Proto-Sinaitic and Phoenician, the letter "mem" meant water. "Mayim" מַיִם, is water in Hebrew. "Mizu" 水, is water in Japanese. In the Americas, we can relate to the mighty Missouri, Mississippi, and Amazon rivers. Notice the shared influence of the MZ root with مصر, Miṣr, an ancient name for Egypt (a.k.a. TA MRY, Beloved Land), home of the Nile? (and perhaps Mesopotamia, in the midst of two rivers?) In Egyptian cosmology, all emerged from the chaotic waters of "Nun". N also looks like a sawtooth wave. Today N relates to the sea as "nautical". If you chop the M in half, you get an A for aquatic; "a", water in Sumerian; "atl", water in Aztec; and "ama", water in Cherokee.
WWWW
IF The English word for flower incorporates F, which depicts a leaf, feathery object, or foliage; l, the long stem; O, the glowing sun, or O, a glittering dew drop; W, a crown of petals; e, seeds, pollen, or anther; and r, a rising, vertical stem and branch, or an unfurling spiral rotation.
The Chinese word for flower is 花 huā, pronounced "hWā". It employs H, meaning heavenly, with H interpreted as the statospheric top rung of the world's Highest space ladder. H started out as a fence "heth" in Proto-Sinaitic, but over time, got rotated. If you rotate the fence shape, you can build bridges, ladders, and double-pane windows to let in Helios, the sun! Today, the Chinese character for sun looks like a window. A small letter h, is the hand that picks flowers. H represents life, the ladder-like DNA helix, and the hallowed breath of life from the branching hallways of throat and lungs. U is for the flower's nectar bearing cup, U is for the bee's tongue that slurps the ambrosia up! W is a crown of petals, and alludes to water, glow, wide, wings, growing, wild strewn, and waving in the wind. A is an eye looking down. "Ayin" meant eye in Proto-Sinaitic and Phoenician, although it took an eye-like O shape. Color, is technically indicated by A, interpreted as the angle of the color wheel spectrum. Ho is whole, white light; HW is whole light fanned out into a rainbow.
So the letters in the Chinese word for flower, 花 "hWā", can actually be used to draw a hand-like flower, and translate to a visual extravaganza: "heavenly, living splashes of color", "flowers are heaven's water colors", or "My eye looks down, my hand picks a crown of colorful petals", or "flowers, a handful of color." You can mix and match the visual interpretations of letters to bring out other facets of meaning and create your own poetic definitions! Visual Super Language is a fabric of understanding woven from many angles!
W as a wing appears in the verb flew, and many bird names such as: owl, fowl, hawk, penguin, swan, wren, warbler, swallow, quail, and crow.
The elbow, homologous to the wing, is also depicted by w, as is the elbow-related action of arm-Wrestling, and a hugging embrace to the heart, gathering "With" affection, the wide elbow gesture of shrugging with beWilderment saying "I don't know", and spreading arms to the sky with Wonder.
The word "two", is traced etymologically to Latin and Greek "duo", but this does not justify the word. Visually however, we can reason that the letter "t" is the three-toed foot of a bird. W is a pair of wings. O represents the eye. A bird has two feet, two wings, and two eyes!
The word "NOW", is traced to, but not explained by, the Greek "nu" and Latin "nunc". Using alphabet symbolism, the meaning anchors visually to the letter W, the image of a splash of water. "Now" is the brief interval of time in which a splash of water appears flash frozen in the shape of a W-shaped crown. A narrow, n-shaped finger or column of water rises in the center, and a glittering orb, a droplet of water, the O, is suspended in the air above! Splash down. Now! WoW!
Y is two HANDS raised to the SKY, or a single hand with an open palm. The case for Y representing hands is extensive: The letter "yodh" in the Mother Language of Phoenician, looks like and Y-shaped hand and bent elbow, and means hand. "Yud" يد in Arabic is hand. Yòu, 又 in Chinese is hand. In Hebrew, יד, transliterated YD, is hand.
English words related to the Y hand include: mY, Yield, paY, spraY, awaY, Yearn, Yank, Yo-yo, Yawn, plaY, and praY.
The word "MY", related to Greek "μου", and Latin "mea", indicates possession. Appropriately, it is composed of two letters that depict the hand, the means of aquiring and holding things. M is the lines on the palm which fortune-tellers interpret as omens of destiny, and Y for the open yielding, giving hand.
Y represents the sky. It is two hands yawning, yearning, praying, questioning the universe's wide mysteries, asking, "why?", addressing the divinity dwelling in the sky beyond where the birds fly. In French and Spanish, "Y" means "there." Up up, and away! Yonder. Beyond!
Recognizing that Y represents the sky, helps us to understand "FLY" as F-feathers L-elevate Y-sky; and decode the Native American language Kalapuya in which "YA-PO-AH" means very high place. Ya-po-ah is constructed of Y for sky; A above; P in Greek π, plateau; O over; A above; and H, for high. "Muyal" the Mayan for word for cloud refers to waters in the sky. Mu means miasmic waving waters as in maya, Sanskrit for the mists of cosmic illusion, or in the hieroglyphic MW; U is up; Y is sky; A means above; and L is the flowing cloud layer and perhaps long streaks of rain. Muyal, the clouds, are the waters on high, that are like hands (M) that mask the sun and pour the rain.
Knowing that Y represents the sky helps us to decode Yǔ 雨, the Chinese word for rain.
It can be interpreted as Y for sky with falling water droplets; and U for bUckets of water poUring down from a T, Thunder and lightning cloud!
月
The Chinese word for moon is 月 Yuè. In this case, Y is sky; U is the crescent moon, and e is the metaphorical eye of the night sky, the left eye of Ra in Egyptian cosmology; a depiction of the moon on the horizon; the reflection of the moon in water; or the phase of the moon with one half invisible. If you parse the word YooWE, the moon is the hand that stirs the waves (W) and determines the level ( E ) of the tides.
O is the SUN. This is the meaning of the O in words like HOT, NOON, HORIZON, ONE, BROWNED, GOLD, GLOW, YELLOW, and SHADOW, an X=sh shield of the sun's glow. Various greetings and exclamations may actually share origin as odes, obeisances, and ovations to the emergence ( J ) of the glorious rising sun: HELLO, HOLA, ALOHA, BONJOUR, JAMBO, CIAO, GOOD DAY, OK, OH, Olé, WELCOME, and WOW!
AO (Maori, dawn.
A= Arising, O =Sun.)
el SOL ( sun, Spanish)
(e - sunset, S - rise and set sinusoid
S = spectrum, signal, sign, WISDOM
O = light; L = light.
HOY (today, Spanish)
H=HEAVEN, high ladder
O = Sun, light
Y = praYing hands up, skY
OWR אוֹר (Hebrew, light:
O=Sun, W=glow, R=radiance
Let there be Light: "Yehi Owr!")
OM ॐ (Sanskrit, mystical syllable)
O, the Sun of mystical Enlightenment emerging from the (M) mental mists of माया Maya, the mundane illusion of me, myself. Maya translates pictographically into a watery ( M marine , aquatic A )
miasma of distracting ( Y ) hand waving.
T a i Y O 太陽 ( Japanese, sun)
T=GREAT, thick, primordial tree; A=above;
i = sun reflected in water,
Y=praYing hands up, skY, O=Sun, light)
YOM יְוֹם (Hebrew, day: Sky light)
Y=praYing hands up, skY, O=Sun, light
M = mountains, monde=world, mer=sea.
Sun in sky, above the mountains.)
ZǎO 早 (Chinese, early:
Zero point of dawn
A=arising above; O=sun.)
DAWN
The meaning of the word "dawn" emerges naturally from its letters: D, is the disk of the sun emerging from the horizon. A, is an arrow pointing up, indicating arising. W is the widening glow of the sun's glorious crown of light. N is a nativity scene with a woman kneeling for birth, the ergonomic posture for gravity-assisted labor favored in ancient times, as depicted in Egyptian hieroglyphs.
N, the woman kneeling for birth, is strongly associated with femininity and birth world-wide. The Sumerian word for woman was "nin", the Chinese word for woman is 女 "Nǚ". "Né" means born in French. Knee in French is "genou". Related words in English include "feminine", "nurse", "pregnancy", "nativity", "gynecology", and "nun". The N may also depict a person kneeling in deference to nobility to divinity. The monastic "nun" is composed of N for feminine and N for kneeling in prayer. The letter N is doubly appropriate!
Letter by letter, "dawn" means the birth of the rising sun. Words for dawn in other languages use the same letters! The Egyptian hieroglyph for dawn is transliterated "ANDW". The Arabic word for light is ضوء " DAW' ". The Chinese word for dawn, is 旦 "DAN", a cubist rendering of the sun hovering above the horizon.
The rising sun D also helps us interpret "Dōng" 東, the Chinese word for East, place of the rising sun. The letter G, the grand finale of "Dong" is a rotated image of a person facing the GIANT, GLOWING sun on the horizon. Words like MIND, KNOW, and IDEA, which resonate with the metaphor of the dawning, are composed of letters which evoke, like the letter K, the glow of the rising sun.
Words and letters reflect on each other, bottom up, with letters seeding the blooming flower of word meaning; and top down with words casting a shadow of implication on letters. You can use this relationship to deduce new meanings and advance your own discoveries! Please e-mail me, or share your news with the discussion forum! (TBA)
O is the Sun, D is the Dawn: How words bloom from pictures in the alphabet by Celeste Claire Horner reveals the international symbolism of each letter of the alphabet, reinventing the dictionary with pictographic definitions which supply the rational justification for words from a global perspective. Finally, the power of the technique will be demonstrated as readers use their new insights to translate songs and text from Chinese, Egyptian, Hebrew, Sumerian, Swahili, Australian aboriginal Anangu, Cherokee, Mayan, and more!
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celeste @ words-in-bloom.com 5-22-2017
O is the Sun, D is the Dawn
How Words Bloom from Hidden Pictures in the Alphabet