Steven Avery
Administrator
The internet brought many of these topics to the fore. One irony is that it was in the "sacred name" circles that this equivalence was first noted.
15 years ago, on the sacred/qodesh name forum, the Latin aspect of this, which Nehemia Gordon studied with Latin professors, was properly pointed out!
Remember, Jupiter is "jove"-pater. (This looks to be the only tweak needed for what was written in 2001.)
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15 years ago, on the sacred/qodesh name forum, the Latin aspect of this, which Nehemia Gordon studied with Latin professors, was properly pointed out!
Remember, Jupiter is "jove"-pater. (This looks to be the only tweak needed for what was written in 2001.)
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Amazing. And Nehemia adds how this helped create the yahweh abomination in the 1800s, by scholars, especially Gesenius, using the pagan information overlaid falsely on the Hebrew.Have we been duped?
YermeYah - May, 2001
http://www.eliyah.com/forum2/Forum1/HTML/002719.html
Continuing on, the question: what is the Latin pronunciation of the demon JOVE? Again, Jove was another name for Jupiter, both Latin for the Greek Zeus.
According to Latin pronunciation rules, the letter "J", anciently written as "I", when at the beginning of a word, is always pronounced as the letter "Y".
The letter "O" can be either have a long or short pronunciation. If long, it sounds like the "o" in "go". If short, it sounds like the "a" in "father".
The letter "V" always has a "W" sound in Latin.
The letter "E" can be long or short. If long, it has the sound of "a" in "say". If short, it has the sound of "e" in "red".
To hear the Latin pronunciation of letters for yourself, you can go to the following link...note: You will need Real Audio on your computer in order to hear the sounds:
Latin Sounds
That gives four possible pronunciations for the Latin Jove:
1. Yowe (yohweh)
2. Yowa (yohway)
3. Yawe (yahweh)
4. Yawa (yahway)
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