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In the last section, Hebrew words were brutally torn apart and meaning was derived from the letters and combinations of letters within. This seems crazy, because we cannot do that in English. A cat has nothing to do with 'catastrophe', unless of course, you have a cat; then you know better. [Did you see what I did there?] | In the last section, Hebrew words were brutally torn apart and meaning was derived from the letters and combinations of letters within. This seems crazy, because we cannot do that in English. A cat has nothing to do with 'catastrophe', unless of course, you have a cat; then you know better. [Did you see what I did there?] | ||
Modern rabbis remember that Hebrew words get their meaning from the combined meaning of the letters. This is called 'Notarikon'. It is a property of the language. But the rabbis do not remember how to do it. There are many modern scholars who pretend they understand it. | |||
Some violate the rules for notarikon. The letters must stay in their order because the order has meaning as well. But they scramble the letters to find new meaning. Some confuse Gematria with Notarikon; converting letters to numbers. Some distract you with anagrams. | The version we use here has been tediously restored. | ||
|Some violate the rules for notarikon. The letters must stay in their order because the order has meaning as well. But they scramble the letters to find new meaning. Some confuse Gematria with Notarikon; converting letters to numbers. Some distract you with anagrams. | |||
The Notarikon used in this work was derived by reverse engineering 8000 Hebrew words to derive the meaning of the letters as if in a giant multidimensional crossword puzzle. | The Notarikon used in this work was derived by reverse engineering 8000 Hebrew words to derive the meaning of the letters as if in a giant multidimensional crossword puzzle. |