*MY GRANDMOTHER/MOTHER-IN-LAW~JESUS'S MOTHER:MARY:IS: NOT: A PRINCESS OR: A QUEEN&HAS NOT EVER BEEN:A *PRINCESS OR:A QUEEN.
I-n-anna
*Quaking homolog, KH domain RNA binding (mouse), also known as QKI, is a protein which in humans is encoded by the QKI gene.[5][6]
QKI belongs to a family of RNA-binding proteins called STAR proteins for Signal Transduction and Activation of RNA.[7] They have an HNRNPK homology (KH) domain embedded in a 200-amino acid region called the GSG domain. Other members of this family include S-A-M-6-8 (KHDRBS1) and SF1 .[8] Two more new members are KHDRBS3[9] and KHDRBS2.[10]
...." QKI controls translation of many oligodendrocyte-related genes.
G-e-b-e-l e-l-A-r-a-k K-n-if-e
*S-hu-ru-p-pa-k (Sum-e-ri-a-n: 𒋢𒆳𒊒𒆠 Š-u-ru-p-pa-gKI, "the healing place"), modern T-e-l-l Fa-r-a, was an ancient Sumerian city situated about 55 kilometres (35 mi) south of Nippur on the banks of the Euphrates in Iraq's Al-Q-ā-d-i-s-i-y-yah Governorate. S-hu-ru-p-pa-k was dedicated to N-i-n-l-i-l, also called Su-d, the goddess of grain and the air.[1]
*Ki helped maintain relationships between the other Untheric powers and between such gods of earth as Silvanus and M-i-e-l-ik-ki.[1]
Priesthood
Ki (goddess)
Ki was the earth goddess in Sumerian religion, chief consort of the sky god A-n.[1] In some legends[citation needed] Ki and A-n were brother and sister, being the offspring of A-n-s-h-ar ("Sky P-i-v-o-t") and Ki-s-h-ar ("Earth Pivot"), earlier personifications of heaven and earth.
By her consort Anu, Ki gave birth to A-n-u-nn-a-ki, the most prominent of these deities being Enlil, god of the air. According to legends, heaven and earth were once inseparable until Enlil was born; Enlil cleaved heaven and earth in two. An carried away heaven. Ki, in company with E-n-l-i-l, took the earth. Ki marries her son, E-n-l-i-l, and from this union all the plant and animal life on earth is produced.[2]
Some authorities question whether Ki was regarded as a deity since there is no evidence of a cult and the name appears only in a limited number of Sumerian creation texts. Samuel Noah Kramer identifies Ki with the Sumerian mother goddess N-i-n-hu-r-sa-g and claims that they were originally the same figure.
She later developed into the Babylonian and A-k-k-a-d-ia-n goddess A-n-tu[citation needed], consort of the god A-n-u (from Sumerian A-n).
Family
Ki was the wife and chief consort of A-n-u, the God of the Sky. They are thought to be brother and sister, who could both be offspring of the God named A-n-s-h-ar (the sky pivot) and Ki-s-h-ar (the earth pivot). Making A-n-s-h-a-r and Ki-s-h-a-r her father and mother.
Ki was a mother to 1, who was named E-n-l-i-l. Her son E-n-l-i-l the God of Air, was part of the A-n-u-nn-a-ki.
*Ki ends up marrying her son, E-n-l-i-l, and according to the myth this was how the plants and animals were created on Earth.
Cuneiform sign
Cuneiform Ki (B-o-r-ge-r 2003 nr. 737; U+12-1-A0 𒆠) is the sign for "earth". It is also read as G-I-5, G-U-NN-I (=KI.NE) "hearth", K-ARAŠ (=KI.K-A-L.B-A-D) "encampment, army", KI-S-LA-Ḫ (=KI.U-D) "threshing floor", and SU-R-7 (=KI.G-A-G). In A-k-k-a-d-ia-n orthography, it functions as a determiner for toponyms and has the syllabic values gi, ge, qi, and qe.
Description
Ki manifested as a beautiful, petite woman with: delicate features. She could not be touched by anything thrown through the air at her, and at will she could change her shape into any non-monstrous form. She could summon up to one hundred of any creature of the beast type, though only one species at a time and no species could be summoned more than once per week. She took half damage from any attack.[5]
Ruth: Lesson 4: At the Threshing Floor
Ruth’s mother-in-law, Naomi, now realizes that God was not against her but was caring for her even in her difficulties. She is now excited that one of her redeemers (and thus, Ruth’s redeemer) is showing an interest in Ruth. No longer “bitter,” Naomi now plans. Ruth has now been working in Boaz’s field for about two months (Ruth 2:23).
Excursus: The Grain after Harvesting
After harvesting the grain, workers would separate the grain from the plants stems on which the grain grew. This process was called “threshing.”
Workers went to the “threshing floor,” an open-air area in the field some 50 to 60 feet in diameter. To make a threshing floor, the large stones needed to be removed. The ground surface was then wetted and stomped on until the ground became compacted. Stones were set in place to surround the threshing floor to keep the grain within it.
The threshers would beat the grain with sticks or use oxen to trample it. Sometimes, they would use a threshing board or sledge, which was a wooden board with stones or iron spikes fixed underneath. Oxen dragged the board, further weighted by the driver or a child, loosening the kernels of grain and breaking up the stalks.
After threshing, workers separated the grain from the chaff, which consisted of the bits of straw and the outer husks of the grain. This was called “winnowing,” which usually took place in the late afternoon to dusk. This was not only a cooler time of day, but the wind blew in from the Mediterranean Sea, which was needed for winnowing to take place. That’s why threshing floors were outside, so the grain could be exposed to the wind during that time.
Workers would toss the straw, chaff, and grain into the air, using a winnowing fork. With the breeze from the sea, the chaff would blow a good distance. The straw landed closer, but it was the grain that fell back to the threshing floor because of its heavier weight and smaller surface area. To protect the grain from being stolen, workers would sleep on the threshing floor using piles of straw as their bedding.
——–
Naomi Hatches a Plan
Read Ruth 3:1
- What does Naomi want for Ruth?
“rest”: Hebrew, manoach, a place of rest. Manoach has a secondary meaning of “home,” since a home was where one rested from his daily labors. However, manoach primarily means “rest.” No longer bitter, Naomi extends a covenant blessing pf “rest” to Ruth. Through the Old-Covenant Law, God had established, Ruth should receive “rest” by having a husband, a redeemer, to provide for her. Naomi then points to the source of this “rest” in the next verse.
E-n-ki (Sumerian: 𒀭𒂗𒆠) is the Sumerian god of water, knowledge (ge-s-tú), crafts (g-a-š-am), and creation (n-u-d-i-m-mu-d), and one of the A-n-u-nn-a-ki. He was later known as Ea or Ae[5] in A-k-k-a-d-ia-n (A-s-s-y-ri-a-n-Baby-l-o-n-ia-n) religion, and is identified by some scholars with Ia in Canaanite religion. The name was rendered Ao-s in Greek sources (e.g. Damascius).[6]
He was originally the patron god of the city of E-ri-du, but later the influence of his cult spread throughout Mesopotamia and to the Canaanites, Hittites and Hurrians. He was associated with the southern band of constellations called stars of Ea, but also with the constellation A-Š-IK-U, the Field (Square of Pegasus).[7] Beginning around the second millennium B-C-E, he was sometimes referred to in writing by the numeric ideogram for "40", occasionally referred to as his "sacred number".[8][9] The planet Mercury, associated with Baby-l-o-n-ia-n N-a-b-u (the son of Mar-du-k) was, in Sumerian times, identified with E-n-ki.[10]
Many myths about E-n-ki have been collected from various sites, stretching from Southern Iraq to the Lev-a-nt-i-ne coast. He is mentioned in the earliest extant cuneiform inscriptions throughout the region and was prominent from the third millennium down to the Hellen-i-s-t-ic period.
Part of Speech: Proper Name Location
Transliteration: Q-i-y-r
Phonetic Spelling: (k-ee-r)
Definition: "wall", a city in Moab
Ruth
Part of Speech: Proper Name Location
Transliteration: Qir Cheres or Qir Chareseth
Phonetic Spelling: (keer kheh'res)
Definition: "wall of earthenware", a fortified city in Moab
“For I hate divorce,” says the LORD, the God of Israel. “
Part of Speech: Proper Name Location
Transliteration: Q-i-y-r
Phonetic Spelling: (k-ee-r)
Definition: "wall", a city in Moab
Ruth
Part of Speech: Proper Name Location
Transliteration: Qir Cheres or Qir Chareseth
Phonetic Spelling: (k-ee-r k-h-e-h'r-e-s)
Definition: "wall of earthenware", a fortified city in M-oa-b
Liber Ruth (Hebraice: מגילת רות, M-e-gi-la-t Rut, "volumen Ruth") est liber Bibliae Hebraicae
(Tanach sive Veteris Testamenti. Ruth mulier Moabitida erat, quae proavia Davidis fiebat.
Quo tempore liber
compositus sit, nescitur.
Liber Ruth est novella 85 versuum, quae in religione Iudaica ad quinque "volumina (festiva)"
(M-e-gi-l-lot: Ruth, Canticum Canticorum, Ecclesiastes, Lamentationes, Esther)-
pertinet et in Sollemnitate Hebdomadarum recitatur. Cum in traditione
Graeco-Latina appendix Libri Iudicum habeatur, Ruth inter Iudices et l-i-b-r-o-s
Samuelis inserta est.
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