Steven Greer of the Sirius disclosure project, CE-5 has many saying ,"he is the rare type of person that rarely appears on the world history scene".
What is it to be, " rare"?.
In reference to ,"survival in space"
The message is about the universe ,from interplanetary space to inter stellar space to intergalactic space.
That's the tip ,so it has to be the voice speaking in this video of the wonderful universe.
The definitions may be triangulated with Steven Greer's own definition and his search and the CE-5 initiative to make peaceful alien contact with his, "close encounters of the 5th kind".
The triangulation of the psychology will also be shown.
What is it to be, " rare"?.
In reference to ,"survival in space"
The message is about the universe ,from interplanetary space to inter stellar space to intergalactic space.
That's the tip ,so it has to be the voice speaking in this video of the wonderful universe.
The definitions may be triangulated with Steven Greer's own definition and his search and the CE-5 initiative to make peaceful alien contact with his, "close encounters of the 5th kind".
The triangulation of the psychology will also be shown.
rare. If an event is rare, it doesn't happen often. If an object is rare, there aren't many of its kind. Obviously, finding a rare gem is a rare occasion. Rare comes from the Latin word rarus, meaning “widely spaced,” as rare things are — whether in actual space or in time.
from
www.yourdictionary.com/rare
rareadjective
rar′er, rar′est
Origin of rare
Middle English from Middle French from Classical Latin rarus, loose, thin, scarce, probably from Indo-European base an unverified form (e)re-, loose from source Classical Greek er?mos, solitary
rared, rar′ing
rareadjective
rar·er, rar·est
Origin of rare
Middle English from Old French from Latin rārus
Related Forms:
Related terms
OriginFrom Middle English rare, from Old French rare, rere (“rare, uncommon"), from Latin rÄrus (“loose, spaced apart, thin, infrequent"), from Proto-Indo-European *er(e)-, *rÄ“- (“friable, thin"). Replaced native Middle English gesen ("rare, scarce"; from Old English gÇ£sne), Middle English seld ("rare, uncommon"; from Old English selden), and Middle English seldsene ("rare, rarely seen, infrequent"; from Old Norse sialdsÄ“nn; See seldsome).
Verb(third-person singular simple present rares, present participle raring, simple past and past participle rared)
from
Wikipedia
2019
june 3
In trigonometry and geometry, triangulation is the process of determining the location of a point by forming triangles to it from known points.
Specifically in surveying, triangulation per se involves only angle measurements, rather than measuring distances to the point directly as in trilateration; the use of both angles and distance measurements is referred to as triangulateration.
Triangulation is a manipulation tactic where one person will not communicate directly with another person, instead using a third person to relay communication to the second, thus forming a triangle. It also refers to a form of splitting in which one person manipulates a relationship between two parties by controlling communication between them.
Triangulation may manifest itself as a manipulative device to engineer rivalry between two people, known as divide and conquer[1] or playing one (person) against another.[2]
from
www.yourdictionary.com/rare
rareadjective
rar′er, rar′est
- not frequently encountered; scarce; unusual
- unusually good; excellent: a rare scholar
- not dense; thin; tenuous: rare atmosphere
- OBS.not close together; scattered
Origin of rare
Middle English from Middle French from Classical Latin rarus, loose, thin, scarce, probably from Indo-European base an unverified form (e)re-, loose from source Classical Greek er?mos, solitary
rared, rar′ing
- DIAL.rear (esp. intransitive verb & )
- INFORMALto be eager, enthusiastic, etc.: used in prp.: raring to go
rareadjective
rar·er, rar·est
- Infrequently occurring; uncommon: a rare event; a plant that is rare in this region.
- Excellent; extraordinary: a rare sense of honor.
- Thin in density; rarefied: rare air.
Origin of rare
Middle English from Old French from Latin rārus
Related Forms:
- rare′nessnoun
- Very uncommon; scarce.
Black pearls are very rare and therefore, very valuable. - (of a gas) Thin; of low density.
Related terms
OriginFrom Middle English rare, from Old French rare, rere (“rare, uncommon"), from Latin rÄrus (“loose, spaced apart, thin, infrequent"), from Proto-Indo-European *er(e)-, *rÄ“- (“friable, thin"). Replaced native Middle English gesen ("rare, scarce"; from Old English gÇ£sne), Middle English seld ("rare, uncommon"; from Old English selden), and Middle English seldsene ("rare, rarely seen, infrequent"; from Old Norse sialdsÄ“nn; See seldsome).
Verb(third-person singular simple present rares, present participle raring, simple past and past participle rared)
from
Wikipedia
2019
june 3
In trigonometry and geometry, triangulation is the process of determining the location of a point by forming triangles to it from known points.
Specifically in surveying, triangulation per se involves only angle measurements, rather than measuring distances to the point directly as in trilateration; the use of both angles and distance measurements is referred to as triangulateration.
Triangulation is a manipulation tactic where one person will not communicate directly with another person, instead using a third person to relay communication to the second, thus forming a triangle. It also refers to a form of splitting in which one person manipulates a relationship between two parties by controlling communication between them.
Triangulation may manifest itself as a manipulative device to engineer rivalry between two people, known as divide and conquer[1] or playing one (person) against another.[2]
one of my own quotes:
When nature becomes the blueness of the opposites of the appearance of being a raw man, then the energy of it may flow with any quality of any man.
When nature becomes the blueness of the opposites of the appearance of being a raw man, then the energy of it may flow with any quality of any man.