DefinitionsVaporous; Vedanta; The Vegetated Geographical World Venerous; Victimology; Videographer; View; Vignettist Vilify; Vilidendency; Villein/Villain; Vintage; Virtual; Visceral Vituperative; Voilà; Voluptuous; Vulvouterine; Vulvovaginal [Dictionary Definition]: ‘vaporous: of a person etc.: inclined to be fanciful or vague; of an idea, a statement, etc.: fanciful, vague, insubstantial’. (Oxford Dictionary). The period of Vedanta; lit. ‘end of the Veda’: Vis.:
Vedanta (m.): vedanta (m.): *end of the Veda* (= ‘complete knowledge of the Veda’, cf. vedānta-ga, ); N. of the second and most important part of the Mīmāṃsā or third of the three great divisions of Hindū philosophy (called Vedānta either as teaching the ultimate scope of the Veda or simply as explained *in the Upanishads which come at the end of the Veda* ...”. [emphases added]. ~ (Monier Monier-Williams Sanskrit-English Dictionary; a.k.a. MMW-SED). The Vegetated Geographical World: The world of the mountains and the streams, the world of the trees and the flowers, the world of the clouds in the sky by day and the stars in the firmament by night, and so on and so on ad infinitum. venereous (adj.): 1. lascivious; libidinous; lustful; wanton; 2. giving vigour for or inclination to sexual intercourse: aphrodisiac: as, venereous drugs. [from Latin venereus,venerius, ‘of or pertaining to Venus⁽⁰¹⁾or sexual intercourse’, from Venus (Vener-), ‘Venus’, ‘sexual intercourse’]. ~ (Century Dictionary and Cyclopaedia).⁽⁰¹⁾ venerean (adj.): 1. inclined to the service of Venus, or to sexual desire and intercourse; 2. amorous; wanton. [from Middle English venerien, from Old French venerien = French vénerien; asvenere-ous⁽⁰²⁾+ -an]. ~ (Century Dictionary and Cyclopaedia).⁽⁰²⁾ venereate (tr.v.; pret. and pp. venereated, ppr. venereating): to render amorous or lascivious; [e.g.]: “To venereate the unbridled spirits”. (Owen Feltham, “Resolves, Divine, Moral, and Political”, circa 1620, i. 26). [from venere-ous + - ate¹]. ~ (Century Dictionary and Cyclopaedia).victimology (n.): 1. the possession of an outlook, arising from real or imagined victimisation, which seems to glorify and indulge the state of being a victim; [e.g.]: “But coming from a woman who married her wealth, this kind of victimology is a little, err, rich”; “More and more, African-American iconoclasts reject victimology and embrace American possibility”; “But it is the grievance of a people who turn their own misdeeds into their own victimology, thus making rational discourse all but impossible”; 2. the study of the victims of crime and the psychological effects on them of their experience; [e.g.]: “specialists in victimology will gather to consider how best to help the victims of crime recover”; “A new tale is being spun in the never-ending female victimologysaga”. [origin: Late 15th century (denoting a creature killed as a religious sacrifice): from Latin victima, ‘sacrificial animal’]. ~ (Oxford English Dictionary).videographer (n.): a person involved in the production of video material ⁽⁰¹⁾; videographers shoot the images with a video camera⁽⁰²⁾ (digital or analogue) and may perform minimal or extensive editing of the resulting footage. ~ (The Computer Language Company Inc). ⁽⁰¹⁾videography (n.): the art or practice of using a video camera; (n.): videographer. ~ (American Heritage Dictionary). ⁽⁰²⁾videographer (n.): a person who makes videotapes with a camcorder. [1970-75; derived from photographer]. ~ (Webster’s College Dictionary).View: [Dictionary Definitions]: ‘view: a particular manner of considering or regarding something; a mental attitude; an opinion, idea, or belief concerning a particular subject or thing.’ (©Oxford Dictionary). [Dictionary Definitions]: ‘vilify: depreciate or disparage with abusive or slanderous language; defame, revile, speak evil of; formerly also, speak slightingly of; Synonyms: defame, run down, impugn, revile, berate, denigrate, disparage, speak ill of, cast aspersions at, decry, denounce, fulminate against, malign, slander, libel, conduct a smear campaign against, blacken the name/ reputation of, calumniate, traduce; inf. badmouth, do a hatchet job on, pull to pieces, throw mud at, drag through the mud.’ (©Oxford Dictionary). Villein/Villain: villein or villain (n.): (in medieval Europe) a peasant personally bound to his lord, to whom he paid dues and services, sometimes commuted to rents, in return for his land; cf. churl ⁽⁰²⁾. [C14: from Old French vilein, ‘serf’, from Late Latin vīllānus, ‘worker on a country estate’, from Latin villa; related to Latin vīcus, ‘a village’]. ~ (Collins English Dictionary).Footnotes: ⁽⁰²⁾ churl (n.): 1. (...); 2. (archaic): a farm labourer; 3. a variant spelling of ceorl (=‘a freeman of the lowest class – above a slave but below a thane⁽⁰³⁾ – in Anglo-Saxon England; (adj.): ceorlish). [Old English ceorl; related to Old Norse karl, Middle Low German kerle, Greek gerōn, ‘old man’]. ~ (Collins English Dictionary).⁽⁰³⁾thane or commonly thegn (n.): 1. (in Anglo-Saxon England) a member of an aristocratic class, ranking below an ealdorman⁽⁰⁴⁾, whose status was hereditary and who held land from the king or from another nobleman in return for certain services; 2. (in medieval Scotland): (a.) a person of rank, often the chief of a clan, holding land from the king; (b.) a lesser noble who was a Crown official holding authority over an area of land; (n.): thanage. [Old English thegn; related to Old Saxon, Old High German thegan, ‘thane’]. ~ (Collins English Dictionary). ⁽⁰⁴⁾ ealdorman (n.; pl. ealdormen): an official of Anglo-Saxon England, appointed by the king, who was responsible for law, order, and justice in his shire and for leading his local fyrd⁽⁰⁵⁾ in battle. [Old English ealdor, ‘lord’ + man]. ~ (Collins English Dictionary).⁽⁰⁵⁾ fyrd (n.): the local militia of an Anglo-Saxon shire, in which all freemen⁽⁰⁶⁾ had to serve. ~ (Collins English Dictionary).⁽⁰⁶⁾ freeman (n.; pl. freemen): 1. a person who is not a slave or in bondage; 2. a person who enjoys political and civil liberties; citizen; 3. a person who enjoys a privilege or franchise, such as the freedom of a city. ~ (Collins English Dictionary).[Dictionary Definition]: ‘That is so in essence or effect, although not recognised formally, actually, or by strict definition as such; almost absolute. Possessed of certain physical virtues or powers; effective in respect of inherent qualities. Capable of producing a certain effect or result’. (Oxford Dictionary). [Dictionary Definition]: visceral (adj.): relating to deep inward feelings rather than to the intellect; [e.g.]: ‘the voters’ visceral fear of change’; (adv): viscerally. (Oxford Dictionary). [Dictionary Definition]: visceral (adj.): characterised by intuition or instinct rather than intellect; (adv.): viscerally. ~ (Collins English Dictionary). vituperative (adj.): of, relating to, or characterised by railing (against) offensively; reviling with venomous censure; (synonyms): abusive, vitriolic, virulent, insulting, harsh, withering, malign, belittling, sardonic, derogatory, scurrilous, defamatory, censorious, opprobrious, denunciatory, calumniatory; [e.g.]: “He is one of the author’s most vituperative critics”. ~ (Collins English Thesaurus). [Dictionary Definition]: voilà: there it is!, there you are! (Oxford Dictionary). voluptuous (adj.): 1. derived from gratification of the senses; [e.g.]: “voluptuous pleasure”; 2. sensuously pleasing or delightful; [e.g.]: “voluptuous magnificence”; 3. full and shapely; [e.g.]: “a voluptuous figure”; 4. characterised by or ministering to indulgence in luxury, pleasure, and sensuous enjoyment; [e.g.]: “a voluptuous life”; (adv.): *voluptuously*; (n.): voluptuosity, voluptuousness. [1325-75; Middle English, from Old French voluptueux, from Latin voluptuōsus, full of pleasure’, derivative of volupt(ās), ‘pleasure’ + -ōsus -ous; -u- probably by association with sumptuōsus, ‘sumptuous’]. [emphasis added]. ~ (Webster’s College Dictionary). vulvouterine (adj.): pertaining to the vulva and uterus. ~ (Farlex Partner Medical Dictionary).vulvovaginal (adj.): relating to the external female genitals. ~ (Collins English Dictionary).The Third Alternative (Peace On Earth In This Life Time As This Flesh And Blood Body) Here is an actual freedom from the Human Condition, surpassing Spiritual Enlightenment and any other Altered State Of Consciousness, and challenging all philosophy, psychiatry, metaphysics (including quantum physics with its mystic cosmogony), anthropology, sociology ... and any religion along with its paranormal theology. Discarding all of the beliefs that have held humankind in thralldom for aeons, the way has now been discovered that cuts through the ‘Tried and True’ and enables anyone to be, for the first time, a fully free and autonomous individual living in utter peace and tranquillity, beholden to no-one.
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