TWIN ASTEROIDS Dreamtime SONGstory BURNING BOOMERANG Corroboree - TopicsExpress



          

TWIN ASTEROIDS Dreamtime SONGstory BURNING BOOMERANG Corroboree Songlines Bora Celebration Circles Gurangngdanami When you leave may our spirits stay with you translation, Farewell Fare Well Till we meet again ng in the middle sound like ng in sing Story of Bauple One Songlines SONGStory of the twin asteroids which landed near to Biggenden at Crater Lakes more than 99% of ALL LIFE EXTINGUISHED 90 billion light years as the sun goes around the sun AD INFINITUM behind {AGO} my living memory is profound as I always LOOK LISTEN AND LEARN youtu.be/-rqmj0fiufc ad infinitum Look up ad infinitum at DictionaryLatin, literally to infinity from ad to (see ad-) + infinitum infinity, neuter of adjective infinitus endless (see infinite). infinite (adj.) Look up infinite at Dictionarylate 14c., eternal, limitless, also extremely great in number, from Old French infinit endless, boundless, and directly from Latin infinitus unbounded, unlimited, from in- not, opposite of (see in- (1)) + finitus defining, definite, from finis end (see finish (v.)). The noun meaning that which is infinite is from 1580s.infinitesimal (adj.) Look up infinitesimal at Dictionary1710 (1650s as a noun), infinitely small, from Modern Latin infinitesimus, from Latin infinitus infinite (see infinite) + -esimus, as in centesimus hundredth. Related: Infinitesimally.infinitely (adv.) Look up infinitely at Dictionaryearly 15c., from infinite + -ly (2).infinitive (n.) Look up infinitive at Dictionarysimple, uninflected form of a verb, 1510s (mid-15c. as an adjective), from Late Latin infinitivus unlimited, indefinite, from Latin infinitus (see infinite). Indefinite because not having definite person or number.infinity (n.) Look up infinity at Dictionarylate 14c., from Old French infinité infinity; large number or quantity (13c.), from Latin infinitatem (nominative infinitas) boundlessness, endlessness, from infinitus boundless, unlimited (see infinite). Infinitas was used as a loan-translation of Greek apeiria infinity, from apeiros endless.re- Look up re- at Dictionaryword-forming element meaning back to the original place; again, anew, once more, also with a sense of undoing, c.1200, from Old French and directly from Latin re- again, back, anew, against, Latin combining form conceivably from Indo-European *wret-, metathetical variant of *wert- to turn [Watkins]. Often merely intensive, and in many of the older borrowings from French and Latin the precise sense of re- is lost in secondary senses or weakened beyond recognition. OED writes that it is impossible to attempt a complete record of all the forms resulting from its use, and adds that The number of these is practically infinite .... The Latin prefix became red- before vowels and h-, as in redact, redeem, redolent, redundant.eternity (n.) Look up eternity at Dictionarylate 14c., quality of being eternal, from Old French eternité eternity, perpetuity (12c.), from Latin aeternitatem (nominative aeternitas), from aeternus enduring, permanent (see eternal). Meaning infinite time is from 1580s. In the Mercian hymns, Latin aeternum is glossed by Old English ecnisse.
Posted on: Tue, 18 Nov 2014 17:53:29 +0000

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