Separate symbols and agglutinated syllables 2

  Separate symbols and agglutinated syllables 2

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 ER_I_PAEK

The ban begins here.

 ER_I_BANEK_IBAN

Sowing.

 Start

The symbol is from Rock 1 an it is also found among the rock-carvings in Askum, Bohuslän. This tells about the symbol language being used generally in several places.

 ………..

Possibly "give in the urn". Another alternative is that the sought point is between GEUD and URN.

Sun and moon

In several symbol languages they set symbols on a pedestal. Probably to avoid misunderstanding or show that the object is above earth. We also see that they add an extra stroke to express a period. These symbols might be the moon and sun.

ER I URN

The Urn was actual at equinoxes about 2000 BC at the same time as the Serpent Head. This means "Is in Urn" and is from rock 1.

 ………..

A time-limit on rock 21.

He does it

 

This lonesome fellow is from the early rock 22 in the Meadow. We find a man on the ecliptic in many early cultures. Then it is not the one in pair with Virgin. It seems to be Hercules/Heracles up to the position in the pictures. Usually he is alone and as archetype the one: "He does it" and then meaning the work. The myths about the big man as Hercules, Heracles tells about dirty work and maybe he was good help in threshing.

 EKURBAN

 .

EKS /X

 

In Swedish we have different words for a cross parallel to the reference and this in 45 degrees angle. In Danish the word "ekse" means to go across. In astro-symbolism I call this the inner cross and it is between the cardinal points in the parallel cross.

In the connection it means Candlemas

AKX

The cross and AK together are Candlemas … or maybe Beltain.

"This is it" 

This symbol says "This is x in the square". Here it points at the star Koschab, which they used as pole star about 2000 BC.

Fifteen shares

 

Aside in a corner of the peasants Almanac is this figure. The 15 shares are in an enclosure and we can speculate in sharing the harvest. The Iron Age field at Levene, Västergötland had about 25 small fields divide by stone strings. We also know that they surely shared everything equally. That means that they shared the fields somehow in time equally. Maybe by rotating or by the lot.

FIURKER

Maybe this says "Fire in the house or under the kettle" since this symbol is at the autumn side at Evenstorp.

 …….

"Is in heel" … or maybe in half.

Twelve

These are surely units. Then it is only to know in which connection.

Nine

The same counts for the nine units. Both are on the Law rock.

ERIPA

 .

GEUD

 

GEUD in Swedish and GEUR in Danish, since we know the names Gyden and Gyr in myths and still in use in place-names. It means, "to give out". The big cupmark is normally between 9 and 12 centimetres in diameter. It may also mean the Mother Earth in the position from the Inanna myth in which case we should se forward for the growth.

GEUD GEUD

 

Two marks are of course the verb or a phrase "giving out". The symbol was use in Babylonian astro-symbolism at harvest and maybe in other places.

 ER_I_BAN

 

To give out in ban means surely giving to the soil.

 ER_I_KER or GEUD_I_KER

 

Er or Geud is enclosed depending on the size of the dot. It means perhaps that the star is visible all the time since Capella and the three stars under that became circumpolar. However, the solution may be that the harvest is in the enclosure or some other interpreting.

 ………..

"Geud is in urban"

 ………….

"Give out in half ban" …The little RA-mark on the half circle means usually Ramadan. This cutting is from Rock 1 in an area they surely used for offer since there are many cupmarks.

 …………. 

On the Peasant’s Almanac two ships begin with the Geud-symbol in stem and ends in "have out". Geud is the virtual giving Might. In our language we often use an abstracted virtual symbol to fulfil reasoning. The other symbols maybe tell that they had to wait three moons for sowing.

 Maiden Stone? … sight stone

This may be a graded stela pictured on rock 1. In practical astronomy they surely used two stable points. One was the KEN or stela in stone or wood and maybe graded. The other was the HEEL stone or pole from where to observe. The primitive mind of some scientist maybe wants to call them a totem, who knows? Anyhow one possible Gyrstone we have in Färgelanda on Dal and Maidstone, Edstone, Freystone are known place-names. They are all possible evidence.

Half

On the rock this is relatively bigger than the footprints and is the meaning "half" perhaps.

I

 

The logic may be that it is longer than the cupmark ER. Then it shows that something definite is "in the ban" or exists. In Scandinavian languages it is "in". In agglutinated symbol rows or merged symbols an "i" fits between the symbols sometimes.

In EK

 

  ……….

This symbol is pictured with the AK or EK upwards. Then it maybe means that some heavenly body is at a certain point.

Four quarters

 

The "stork" at Evenstorp has one leg in this figure surely meaning he is the leader in four quarters. A similar "big man" in Bohuslän has one leg in a big cupmark.

ID

 

The word is fading out in Swedish. In my youth it meant "eager persistent work" or an eddy. The symbol is global and the American Indians use it to picture the work in a season. Some tribes were moving between different season work. The spiral concentrate towards the target is the idea.

IN/OUT

IN or OUT depend on the direction of the spiral, i.e. counter clockwise or not.

ALIGN="CENTER"> …… 

Could be understood as the sun made on a pedestal? Still, it could also be the word LIKER = like. Understood when moon and stars are at a certain cross.

I NA

 

Having doubts about these symbols is easy. That is because they are small and sometimes eroded then easy to ignore. Maybe the documentation has not found the exact shape and leave it open for at least two possibilities. Then this may be I NA and the Lady in the sky or I LI which is the global "like" aligning the astro objects at time limits.

…… 

 ………..

  I know it, but what is it

KE

KE as ken and maybe a twig used as fork to find the fix-star. The weaker GE is "to give".

KEED 

KE ED or GE ED "give place" or the Danish ged meaning Capricorn.

 KE i BAN

KE i BAN or GEBAN … In Danish "ban" = vand = water maybe. But "ban" could also be "orbit" or "round" since we all the time understand the yearly round behind many of the texts

KE i BANKE 

KE i BANKE. Single symbols like this may be instruction at a certain time limit.

 KE_I_KER

In Finnish the word "keika" means seesaw. We see some balances on our rocks. In this case it may also mean, "to give in ker".

 ………..

The latest version is without the corner EK and then KEIKER. However, in the first version it was KE I KEREK.

 ……………

In one quarter of the wheel for the growing season on the Peasant’s Almanac this combination may say "give in the kernel".

 ………….

This lonely figure is on a little rock near the time-wheel at the Shore. Maybe it urges for a pole = ken as an aiming point KE in URRA.

GE(d)Manad

The fork in the stem maybe gives the meaning GE MANAD. Possibly the ged = goat giving name or else to give in that moon, which of course is in Capricorn

KER I KEBAN KE ED.

 .

KER

KER/KR or GER/GR is the root in krets which is the abstraction for the early assembly such as those belonging to a thing. The word is still used in Germany and in Scandinavia. It is also the root in the old Celtic word kermesse meaning fair and perhaps a thing at the same time. The circle is an enclosure. We can also set the observation point at the line, then it is a round as well as orbit and ban.

KER_i(n)_KER

In Sumerian this means well. We could read it "give in the ker". At the Crocodile it symbolises Gemini and can also be two quarters.

KU/SU/CU

 

"As everybody knows" is the meaning taken from Celtic. It is the one not to be mentioned in other ways. Perhaps also the one who knows and have knowledge as in the Swedish word "kunna" = be able to/could. We find also the Sumerian variant where the centre is left open meaning Enki/Ea or "the highest".

KUAN

The word When.

LI

LI or the letter L.

LI GEUD

A version of LI GEUD or the Danish "ligeud" = straight on according to an understood reference.

 In the fork

 

In the fork ... The oldest texts on the Ronar West begin with this symbol. Could be understood as referring to the aiming point?

LIKER

  ………………

LI KER is also a symbol on the rocks in the water near the time-wheel at the shore. I guess they have been notation or aiming points when observing the sky from the time-wheel. We find it also on the rock 16 in the Garden where the stroke is drawn thorough the outline. Then it is like a Q or a question. To be like in this sense is a question.

 ……………

The interesting symbol at rock 16 is in the middle the letter A, which we see also on rock 1. Maybe they wanted to define the point between the two circles?

 ……….

 ???????????? in the middle ?

 ……..

 .

 MADA

Mada? Since there is the double line it should be DA and the strokes give the MA and the word means Serpent in the sky.

NINDA

We cannot expect complete alikeness, but this symbol is near the Sumerian NINDA meaning food.

MI MI

This is a loan from Hittitian. Can mean half year mark

Mother and child

With few strokes an idea may be drawn clearly.

NANA

Nanna was a Sumerian moon god also known in the Edda.

 ……………

Fourth quarter at Knarrbyn has the prefix NA.

 ……….

At Knarrbyn the first quarter is open and has the prefix NE.

OK

One of several yoke-symbols that could mean "and", because it is a conjugation between two units as for instance a pair of oxen.

OK/and

Another "and".

 …….

 

The meaning seems to vary between new and yoke. The later maybe came from Latin’s word for eye. Latin is nearer the ancient languages than our days tongue. It is a source to be used when working with proto-scripts.

Field

 

IKU was the Sumerian name for the Square of Pegasus and we see the field in their time symbolism.

RI

The symbol we find in Linear B and also in Hittitian symbols. On one ritual text I read "Rit de Luna" meaning the moon ritual. The text begins with this glyph.

Dipper

 

The Dipper we see in Bohuslän, Östergötland and in Högsbyn as small symbols. The Big Dipper we in Scandinavia call Big Bear or a late name Karl’s Wagon. Some ideograms show a man use a Big Dipper and throw something "over". Is it the year, season or the epagones is difficult to say?

 ……….

In growers practice it was a method to use a shovel to sift the corn from the chaff.

In this dipper are five and a half units. It is above the harvest end on a ship at the Peasant’s Almanac. Is it the epagones or the chaff need a deep investigation?

 ………..

Is this a Babylonian or Hittitian peaked shoe?

KUKU /SUSU

These symbols mark autumn at the Peasant’s Almanac.

………….. 

This odd separate figure maybe marks south at the Ronar Spit in correlation to the time-wheel at the Shore.