AGAPE
Ancient Greek word
And the Albanian language words G(j)I, GUR, BREG, PRAG, PREK(G), TAK(G)OJ, K(G)AP, MUZG, AGIM, MIK(G), NG(J)IS, K(G) AM, etc
The G code for a specific set of words is the metaphor of joining two or more elements into one, it doesn't matter what they are: stones, ge/soil, river or sea water with land on a shore, hand with a other place in touch, land with the beginning of the house on a threshold or railing(g), night with day at dawn, or day with night at dusk, man with man in friend(g), husband with wife in marriage G), etc.
The interchange of G with different auxiliary codes makes a specific difference in words, but the old root is the same for all words.
"G relationship as a friend(g) for two people, G relationship as charity, G relationship as marriage, marriage=mar G-the relationship of a woman with a man, God's relationship with man in agape, etc. All these concepts-words are considered today of unknown origin.
Unknown agape. (G)amore unknown.
Beekes thinks agape comes from Christian usage of the word that may have been influenced by the Hebrew ahaba "love."
But Beekes and company are in ignorance because of the method of comparison they use today, so-called etymology.
AGAPE comes from:
AGAPE=
A GA PE=
A GA BE=P>B
A Ge Be=
A G be>A be G, Asht G, understands G.
Just look at the word Grape to understand the physical application of the code to G in a particular language.
When I catch, touch, shore, stick one letter to another letter and many other words of the specific group have the same code, despite the fact that they are different words today in terms of their meaningful form and performance in today's time.
AGAPE with the thought of the language it came from means "G become", as one flesh, and we all know what happens when a woman and a man become g together, become physically one flesh, n They touch each other, or niri and nitri in the Arvanite language, they touch each other, they touch each other, they kiss each other, just as on a shore the waves of the sea touch the rock or the sand of the coast indefinitely during their G lives, bound between them eternally.
,
And the Albanian language words G(j)I, GUR, BREG, PRAG, PREK(G), TAK(G)OJ, K(G)AP, MUZG, AGIM, MIK(G), NG(J)IS, K(G) AM, etc
The G code for a specific set of words is the metaphor of joining two or more elements into one, it doesn't matter what they are: stones, ge/soil, river or sea water with land on a shore, hand with a other place in touch, land with the beginning of the house on a threshold or railing(g), night with day at dawn, or day with night at dusk, man with man in friend(g), husband with wife in marriage G), etc.
The interchange of G with different auxiliary codes makes a specific difference in words, but the old root is the same for all words.
"G relationship as a friend(g) for two people, G relationship as charity, G relationship as marriage, marriage=mar G-the relationship of a woman with a man, God's relationship with man in agape, etc. All these concepts-words are considered today of unknown origin.
Unknown agape. (G)amore unknown.
Beekes thinks agape comes from Christian usage of the word that may have been influenced by the Hebrew ahaba "love."
But Beekes and company are in ignorance because of the method of comparison they use today, so-called etymology.
AGAPE comes from:
AGAPE=
A GA PE=
A GA BE=P>B
A Ge Be=
A G be>A be G, Asht G, understands G.
Just look at the word Grape to understand the physical application of the code to G in a particular language.
When I catch, touch, shore, stick one letter to another letter and many other words of the specific group have the same code, despite the fact that they are different words today in terms of their meaningful form and performance in today's time.
AGAPE with the thought of the language it came from means "G become", as one flesh, and we all know what happens when a woman and a man become g together, become physically one flesh, n They touch each other, or niri and nitri in the Arvanite language, they touch each other, they touch each other, they kiss each other, just as on a shore the waves of the sea touch the rock or the sand of the coast indefinitely during their G lives, bound between them eternally.
,
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