SarMegahhikkitha

Feivel is an actual Yiddish name (with the same meaning as Chaim, "life"), yet the author claims it means "5th El (God)". Do you actually believe there's a reason for nonsensically applying English etymology to Semitic roots over the much more plausible theory that the author is self-admittedly a burnout who spent 3 years wasting money on drugs instead of reading and following the books he's trying to analyze?

ElspethTirel

fievel

for nonsensically

attacking the messenger

Feivel is pronounced as 'five-el,' so it isn't hard to see where he got that conclusion. You don't really care about the content though, or you would have picked a better example.

Furthermore: the Middle East is the cradle of civilization, it would make complete sense that languages and cultures which root themselves as descendents from there, would symbolically, metaphorically, and literally tie together.

SarMegahhikkitha

It's from Vivus which is Latin for Life, and Five is from German Fuenf, so a 2-second look at the etymology can keep you from concluding that Batman, Turkey worships Batman, since this methodology allows you to conclude anything you wish.

ElspethTirel

Again, you're ignoring the point and making a ridiculous comparison. Kindly fuck off now.

gosso920

Once I had a wooden whistle, but it wooden whistle.

Then I bought a tin whistle, and now I tin whistle!

ElspethTirel

This is just the first paragraph so you know what it is:

The Lamb of God explained, it's a connection between the sacrificial Pescach Lamb in Exodus, to the Lamb of the Marriage of Revelation, and a word and idiom of our modern day. " Lam ," like "on the run," and there's hidden message in our music and movies which highlight the already bright connection between the word "IsLam" and the eventful trip around the country... where you might say God and I Ko ran . (For the blind, that's co-ran.)