Origin: 14th Century
m-e-n-a-c-e (v.) c. 1300, manacen, "to threaten, express a hostile intention toward," from Old French menacier "to threaten;
urge" (11c.), Anglo-French manasser, from Vulgar Latin *minaciare "to threaten," from minacia "menace, threat" (see menace
(n.)). . .
It's possible that I've dwelt upon the past more thoroughly than anybody should care to imagine as the world may try to sell
itself just about anything i.e. wealth, geniuses; or peace and happiness, etc. While thus allowing for the process of our
maturity to develop in the attitudes of a materialist society, or its values of a nurtured society that’s kindered in
an ‘ambiguity’ that’s withered by the wayside in the missed opportunities of knowledgeable reasoning, or
appreciation. As this all happens as we’re developing as our ancestors must’ve intended or intuitively understood
by allowing for the reasoning of our imagination to develop in the schemas of greater learning or the broader sciences of
things that were here before and that will be here long after. As the wonder of our creativeness evolves in the metaphors
of a political politeness that’s known with-in the recycling of our wealth, or perhaps the hidden mysteries of the cosmos
of greater learning and challenges of tomorrow. . .
|