Excellent. Gaius Valerius, you have have been pinned. It just goes to show - no matter how many times you look there's always something new to see. To illustrate Gaius' point, here's the text from all three passages with slashes to separate the corresponding fragments: p. 3: bababad / al / gharaghta / kamminarronn / konnbronn p. 98: bad / old / karakter / commonorrong / canbung p. 314: Both / all / choractors / chumminaround / gansum With the exception of the stuttering at the start of T-word #1 they all match up syllable by syllable.
Yes, with a stuttering beginning, which of course the dreamer is! 'b-b-both all characters coming around...' I'm glad to know there's another out there that heard this similarity. It cannot be a coincidence. In all the reading I've done about the thunderwords I haven't read of anybody else that has made the connection; not even the McLuhans. Is it just too obvious? Are you also a musician I wonder? I heard the similarity on my first reading many years ago and immediately went back to the first T-word and heard it as the seventh with a stutter. Brilliant.
I'll take mushrooms and listen to it for hours. And do leprechaun magic. You don't have to understand it to feel it. Gang. Sum. Characters. Music. It's laughing and joking.
Meaning: Both all choruses and actors chumm around in a round circle all rounded while I drink a Rum-and-coke/Cubalibre and somebody plays "Humpty-Dumpty" in a backyard's dump, while poor foolish looderamauns turn up the music!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! GET IT? 'Cause I think of "HUMPTY-DUMPTY" when I see "In a Humptadump".
Thank you so much for these videos! You're very scholarly and you explain everything in a concise and comprehensible manner. The way you break down the words and model correct pronunciation is marvelous. I'm really appreciative.
Badolkarakter, commonarrong canbung sounds identical to the first thunderword as well
Excellent. Gaius Valerius, you have have been pinned. It just goes to show - no matter how many times you look there's always something new to see.
To illustrate Gaius' point, here's the text from all three passages with slashes to separate the corresponding fragments:
p. 3: bababad / al / gharaghta / kamminarronn / konnbronn
p. 98: bad / old / karakter / commonorrong / canbung
p. 314: Both / all / choractors / chumminaround / gansum
With the exception of the stuttering at the start of T-word #1 they all match up syllable by syllable.
Yes, with a stuttering beginning, which of course the dreamer is! 'b-b-both all characters coming around...' I'm glad to know there's another out there that heard this similarity. It cannot be a coincidence. In all the reading I've done about the thunderwords I haven't read of anybody else that has made the connection; not even the McLuhans. Is it just too obvious? Are you also a musician I wonder? I heard the similarity on my first reading many years ago and immediately went back to the first T-word and heard it as the seventh with a stutter. Brilliant.
It's like I feel this more than understand it. It's all so beautiful.
I'll take mushrooms and listen to it for hours. And do leprechaun magic. You don't have to understand it to feel it. Gang. Sum. Characters. Music. It's laughing and joking.
Extraordinary.
I really like how you broke this one down. You have made these thunderwords 101 times more enjoyable.
Meaning:
Both all choruses and actors chumm around in a round circle all rounded while I drink a Rum-and-coke/Cubalibre and somebody plays "Humpty-Dumpty" in a backyard's dump, while poor foolish looderamauns turn up the music!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
GET IT? 'Cause I think of "HUMPTY-DUMPTY" when I see "In a Humptadump".
Thank you so much for these videos! You're very scholarly and you explain everything in a concise and comprehensible manner. The way you break down the words and model correct pronunciation is marvelous. I'm really appreciative.
7/10 memorized!! 6/10 at least.
I find the phonetic looderamaun to be much closer to the word ludraman than the way you pronunce it (loo-dre-mon). At least in the parts I'm from.
Thank you, these are great! Romans 11:32, Charge!