'Y' IS THE GOVERNING ETERNAL GENERATIVE PRINCIPAL OF LIFE
Diphthong or a gliding vowel, is a combination of two adjacent vowel sounds within the same syllable. A diphthong is a sound made by combining two vowels, specifically when it starts as one vowel sound and goes to another,
IA is the shorthand form of the Jewish God's Hebrew name as rendered in the Greek alphabet.
The Greek alphabet didn't have the letter Y, the ETERNAL GENERATIVE PRINCIPAL , so the letter "I" in Greek called "Iota" was used to sound out or create the Ya semivowel sound.
The Pythagorean are said to have made use of the sign Y, by suggesting that the vertical upright represented the life's path. Where the line converged, they said the diagonals represented the paths of right and wrong, good and or evil, life and death. In Christian symbolism the sign is called Ypsilon cross, the furka or fork in Latin or the cross of the robbers crucified on either side of Jesus.
The Jewish God's Hebrew name in esoteric shorthand form is contended to be YAH, which is a third person masculine version of the Hebrew verb "hayah" which literally means, or is the expression, the phoneme for "existence" or "to be, the spirit of life", or as in 'I' in English as in I IS or I AM. As in 'I IS THAT I AM.'
The Armenians insist on being referred to as Haya. So when an Armenian says 'YES' (which is I), HAYA, (which is SPIRIT), EM, (which is AM), they are saying I AM HAYA which translates to, I AM LIVING SPIRIT.
The Greeks inserted 'AI' the holy spirit at the end and the beginning of many nouns to assert that God was the creator of everything. So the suffix literally means "of God" or "belonging to God" or better yet "from God". Same way the earlier god name El was used.
In Greek, the PIE 'AI' suffix was used and accepted widely and was permanently incorporated into ancient Greek, which, in turn, influenced the Latin, English and other languages stemming from the original root. As far as vowels go, Robert Graves demonstrates that before the Alphabet was introduced the 5 Vowels placed in the cycle, the annual cycle, with A in the place of the birth of the Sun and O in spring and U at the summer solstice and E placed on the Autumn equinox and finally the phoneme I, the sound of death, at the winter solstice meeting the opener vowel A; one ended up at the concept of life in death, the cycle the poet spoke of as from the womb to tomb. The 'AI' was from the time of Egyptian Hieroglyphs represented by a 'feather' (the feather which weighed the heart to sow heavy with sin it was,) or the two feather representation IA, (sounded AY and YA). We have held on to the sound that represents death or the spirit of transcendence, representing resurrection, the sacred.
Aya with or without the aspirated H as a prefix or a suffix has always represents the living eternal spirit, 'life in death' or 'death in life'.
The first diphthong, where the diphthong makes the sound of life in death and vice versa by combining two vowels, specifically when it starts as one vowel sound and goes to another and flips over to change the meaning.
‘HAYAH is an ancient name or word from religious texts. It appears as HYH or EIE or AYA, in early religious writings. EIE is probably the correct way to transliterate ‘HAYAH since the Torah or Books of Moses are not even ‘Hebrew’ as modern Jews think they are. The Torah is simply phonetic Sumerian as Sollog revealed in his book ORIGIN OF GOD. In Sumerian E is often used to express a Temple, it also means to speak or cry out or pray. I believe that the combination of the vowels AI, or Y as it later became, a yota, or yod or iota all attempts to s out, express the same sound we hear when we hear deep uncontrolled lament.
E – I – E in ancient Sumerian is possibly mistranslated to mean Temple of Prayer, it would be more reasonable to interpret it as the Holy Spirit that resides in the body of MAN, or in existance, life and yes one could extend it to a a temple.
This is probably the most ancient meaning of ‘HAYAH. The SPIRIT WITHIN expressed in sound.
Again I point out that in Hellenes Hebrew which modern Jews use, EIE is pronounced ‘HAYAH, it is interpreted as being 'to be', or 'to exist,' or 'to breath.' The only thing missing in the Sumerian EIE or EA is the aspirant H, as a prefix and suffix. With the double vowel AI, representing birth and death it can be suggested that the holy breath the spirit is eternal.
Life itself they say is ‘HAYAH. The importance of the word ‘HAYAH was explained by Rabbi Sollog in 1995, since the proper form only appears in the Moses verses of Exodus where Moses has a conversation with ‘God’ and God says, ” ‘HAYAH asher ‘HAYAH“. This translated into English suggests god as saying “I am who I am”. SOLLOG goes on to explain that this verse should really be interpreted ‘HAYAH is ‘HAYAH, since the usage was a noun or name he assumes he offers a translation with which I disagree. He offers 'THE LORD 'is' THE LORD.'
I offer that Self-reference occurs in natural or formal languages when a sentence, idea or formula refers to itself. The reference may be expressed either directly—through some intermediate sentence or formula—or by means of some encoding. In philosophy, it also refers to the ability of a subject to speak of or refer to itself, that is, to have the kind of thought expressed by the first person nominative singular pronoun "I" in English.
Self-reference is studied and has applications in mathematics, philosophy, computer programming, and linguistics, as well as in humor. Self-referential statements are sometimes paradoxical, and can also be considered recursive.
Comments