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Online Reference For Body, Mind & Spirit

Subject: Ancient Language

1 definition  /  0 articles  /  7,614 views

An alchemical term for a small vessel. It either means a vessel that simply holds vinegar (acetum) or a small cup that holds as much as an eggshell.

1 definition  /  0 articles  /  9,784 views

Alchemical term for vinegar. May also mean sour wine.

1 definition  /  0 articles  /  7,409 views

Alchemical term for white vinegar.

1 definition  /  0 articles  /  8,138 views

Alchemical term for steel.

1 definition  /  0 articles  /  8,314 views

Alchemical term for red coral. Although it may seem odd to differentiate this type of coral, red coral is a substance that is associated with the planet Mars in ancient Tantric or Indian Astrology. Since some Tantric systems also involved alchemy, it may show that Western alchemy is linked to the systems of India.

1 definition  /  0 articles  /  7,123 views

Alchemical term for a needle.

1 definition  /  0 articles  /  7,602 views

Alchemical term for saltpeter.

1 definition  /  0 articles  /  7,159 views

Alchemical term for the foam of seawater.

1 definition  /  0 articles  /  7,222 views

Alchemical term for sour milk.

1 definition  /  0 articles  /  18,821 views

Alchemical term for fresh skim milk.

1 definition  /  0 articles  /  7,471 views

Alchemical term for mercury.

1 definition  /  0 articles  /  7,175 views

Alchemical term for water that has had a red-hot iron inserted into it.

1 definition  /  0 articles  /  8,974 views
An Irish word that means “dream” or “vision.” It relates to the concept of a poetic vision that gained popularity in Ireland in the late 17th and early 18th centuries. Although there are several variations in the way it is pronounced, the “s” is always pronounced “sh.” Thus, one pronunciation would be “ash-leen.”
1 definition  /  0 articles  /  68,597 views
One of the three parts of the soul according to ancient Egyptian belief. A person must have all three parts to live, and if one part died they all died. The Akh is the immortality of a person; the spirit. In Egyptian symbolism it was depicted as a bird or a flame of fire. In some transliterations of the Egyptian language, Akh is written as Akhu, Ikhu, or just Khu.
See Also:  AkhuIkhuKhu
1 definition  /  0 articles  /  7,288 views

Although this means a "sharp-pointed stone," to alchemists this referred to aconite, a poisonous herb that grows on rocks.

1 definition  /  0 articles  /  8,256 views

According to some authorities, this refers to an oven used by alchemists. Other authorities of alchemical terms say this simply means charcoal.

1 definition  /  0 articles  /  7,733 views

Alchemical term for arsenic.

1 definition  /  0 articles  /  8,651 views
First and last letters of the Greek alphabet; beginnings and endings.
1 definition  /  0 articles  /  6,347 views

Alchemical term for cinnabar, the bright red ore from which mercury is derived.

1 definition  /  0 articles  /  16,382 views
The Egyptian word for “life,” it is represented by a symbol of a cross where the top is a loop and the horizontal bar is shorter than the vertical bar. It was often seen being carried by the loop by Egyptian deities in ancient art. In Latin it is called the crux ansata, which means “cross with a handle.”
1 definition  /  0 articles  /  8,417 views

Alchemical term meaning "Gold of the Philosophers," a code for lead.

2 definitions  /  0 articles  /  126,858 views
1.  One of the three parts of the soul according to ancient Egyptian belief. A person must have all three parts to live, and if one part died they all died. The Ba is the individuality or specific personality of a person; the soul. In Egyptian symbolism it was depicted as a bird with the head of a human.

2.  That part of the soul attributed to Hod and Yesod.

1 definition  /  0 articles  /  16,468 views
Basilides was a scholar of the 2nd century C.E. who knew the Hebrew and Christian scriptures as well as being knowledgeable in Egyptian and Greek thought. But he also received what was to become a secret tradition named after him, based on knowledge passed to him from an early interpreter of the Apostle Peter. Basilides wrote psalms, odes, and commentaries on the Gospels. He also wrote a gospel for his own sect, but very little of his writings have been preserved. His system seems to include ...
1 definition  /  0 articles  /  21,339 views
Followers of the teachings of Basilides.
1 definition  /  0 articles  /  15,373 views
The old Irish name for the Tree Alphabet, similar to “A-B-C” being used today to refer to the English Alphabet.
1 definition  /  0 articles  /  6,741 views
And archaic term for the element sulfur.
1 definition  /  0 articles  /  7,034 views
Sanskrit name of the Moon.
1 definition  /  0 articles  /  6,460 views

A code that substitutes one set of symbols for another. Ciphers are often used to encrypt concepts a person wants to keep secret. Only a person with a key to the cipher can translate it. However, because this type of code is easily cracked, many modifications to a simple cipher have appeared.

1 definition  /  0 articles  /  7,920 views
Derived from early pictographic writing, cuneiform consists of wedge-shaped marks that, when placed together, form words. Cuneiform was written by pressing the ends of prepared reeds into soft clay tablets and cylinders. It was in wide use in Sumer, Babylon, and Assyria.
1 definition  /  0 articles  /  23,710 views

In the magickal workings of Dr. John Dee (1527-1608), astrologer to Queen Elizabeth I (and some also claim him to have been her spymaster), he made contact with certain angelic beings who used a language distinct from any other. Dee believed these beings to be the same angels that transported the Hebrew prophet, Enoch, to heaven, and hence the name for the language. Enochian words are sometimes called “barbarous” because their pronunciation is so evocative. 

1 definition  /  0 articles  /  4,921 views

General name for the letters used in ancient Ogham, the Celtic tree alphabet.

1 definition  /  0 articles  /  7,147 views
(Pronounced “flayshk”) The Old Irish word used to describe the actual notches on stone, wood, etc., used when writing the Ogham alphabet.
1 definition  /  1 article  /  32,413 views
The language of the Jews of the Middle East. Composed of twenty-two letters (with five letters having a dual form), Hebrew is the basis of both numerology and transpositional letter codes used in the Kabalah. Also a Jewish person.
2 definitions  /  0 articles  /  6,553 views
1.  Cursive writing of ancient Egypt, it developed at the same time as the familiar hieroglyphic writing. It was eventually replaced by the Demotic script (and even later by Greek), but was used by members of the priestly class into the third century c.e.
2.  A form of Egyptian writing, in which the purely pictorial hieroglyphs are written (with ink) in streamlined forms to speed the act of recording information.
2 definitions  /  0 articles  /  54,137 views
1.  One of the three parts of the soul according to ancient Egyptian belief. A person must have all three parts to live, and if one part died they all died. The Ka is the astral double of a person, animal, or thing. It is physically and emotionally identical to the person and given to him or her at birth. In Egyptian symbolism it was depicted as a person with both arms raised or just two raised arms.

2.  That part of the soul attributed to Netzach, Hod, and Yesod.

1 definition  /  0 articles  /  3,782 views

A Turkish word that means "fate."

1 definition  /  0 articles  /  18,407 views
(l’yower) - Old Irish word for book.
1 definition  /  0 articles  /  9,183 views
The study of language and how it’s use impacts all persons involved in a communication.
1 definition  /  0 articles  /  10,429 views
As a result of archeology, there is ample evidence that there have been civilizations that began, became advanced, and then vanished, sometimes for no reason. As a result, people have wondered what those lost civilizations were like. Fueled by stories that seem to be part history and part myth, entire concepts of lost civilizations have been created. In the Atlantic, partially based on the writings of Plato, it is believed there had once been an advanced civilization on an island or continent ...
1 definition  /  0 articles  /  19,725 views
The Gaulish-Brittonic language from which Cornish, Breton, and Welsh descend.
1 definition  /  0 articles  /  9,019 views
This term has multiple meanings. 1) Exoterically, this is a conventional locution for either the Garden of Eden or of the heavenly afterlife. 2) It is also a metonym [an attribute of something used to stand in for the thing itself] for the mystical experience 3) The consonants, PRDS] can be read as an acronym for four methods of Scriptural interpretation: Pashat (authoritative), Remez (allegorical or philosophic), Drash (homiletical or midrashic), and Sod (esoteric or mystical). It ...
1 definition  /  0 articles  /  26,899 views
The Goidelic or ancient Gaelic language from which Old Irish evolved and developed into Middle Irish, and then Modern Irish, Gaelic (Scots Gaelic) and Manx Gaelic. Irish calls "four" and "five" ceathair and cuig (ka-her and koo-eeg), Scots Gaelic calls them ceithair and coig (keh-her and koyk).
1 definition  /  0 articles  /  5,789 views
See Sephiroth. This is a transliteration—the way a word sounds in one language spelled out in another—of a Hebrew term. In the most common transliteration, the “th” is pronounced with a hard “t” followed by a short breath, not like the “th” in the English word “the” (phonetically, the “th” in “the” is called a “fricative”). This is not clear in the archaic “Sephiroth” spelling, leading many people, untrained in Hebrew, to end the word with the fricative, so ...
1 definition  /  0 articles  /  5,904 views
Spelling a word from one language in a second language, according to the way the word sounds in its original language. Often this phonetic spelling does not follow commonly accepted patterns. For example, the Hebrew letter Vahv can sound like an English v, o, or u, even though it is usually shown in English as a v. Thus, the transliteration, depending upon the usage, may show the Vahv as a v, o, or u.
1 definition  /  0 articles  /  4,554 views

Alchemical term for tin.

1 definition  /  0 articles  /  4,846 views

Alchemical term for sugar.

1 definition  /  0 articles  /  3,853 views

Alchemical term for tragacanth gum.

1 definition  /  0 articles  /  3,831 views

Alchemical term for cinnabar.

1 definition  /  0 articles  /  3,774 views

Alchemical term for mercury.

1 definition  /  0 articles  /  4,369 views

Alchemical term for arsenic.

1 definition  /  0 articles  /  4,045 views

Alchemical term for gold.

1 definition  /  0 articles  /  4,189 views

Alchemical term for rhubarb.

1 definition  /  0 articles  /  3,750 views

Alchemical term for the mineral marcasite.

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