Monday 17 October 2011

dharma exams

-what is quicker than the wind?
-thought
-what can cover the earth?
-darkness
-who are more numerous, the living or the dead
-the living, because the dead are no longer
-give me an example of space
-my two hands as one
-an example of grief
-ignorance
-of poison
-desire
-an example of defeat
-victory
-which came first, day or night
-day, but it was only a day ahead
-what is the cause of world
-love
-what is your opposite
-myself
-what is madness
-a forgotten way
-and revolt?why do men revolt?
-to find beauty, either in life or in death
-and what in each of us is inevitable?
-happiness
-and what is the greatest wonder?
-each day death strikes and we live as though we were immortal.this is the greatest wonder

(στη συγκάτοικό μου που θα μου λείψει πολύ, καλή αρχή/ Mahabharata-P.Brook)

8 comments:

stelios said...

The best things in life are not things.

xtina said...

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Lvd-pv1RQyg&feature=related
καλησπέρα

Αμερικλάνος said...

Ανατρίχιασα.

xtina said...

απ'ό,τι είδα σε ταλαιπωρούν τα διαγωνίσματα!(κι έχει κάτι δύσκολες ερωτήσεις η ζωή ώρες-ώρες...)
καλωσόρισες Αμέρικο

Anna said...

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BguGJEtLcN0&feature=related

xtina said...

ομορφιά
χχχχχχχχχχχχχχχχχχ

xtina said...

http://emuc2011.blogspot.gr/2012/08/blog-post_27.html

xtina said...

*mer-
Proto-Indo-European root meaning "to rub away, harm." Possibly identical with the root *mer- that means "to die" and forms words referring to death and to beings subject to death.

It forms all or part of: amaranth; ambrosia; amortize; Amritsar; immortal; manticore; marasmus; mare (n.3) "night-goblin, incubus;" morbid; mordacious; mordant; moribund; morsel; mort (n.2) "note sounded on a horn at the death of the quarry;" mortal; mortality; mortar; mortgage; mortify; mortmain; mortuary; murder; murrain; nightmare; post-mortem; remorse.

It is the hypothetical source of/evidence for its existence is provided by: Sanskrit mrnati "crushes, bruises," mriyate "to kill," martave "to die," mrta- "died, dead," mrtih "death," martah "mortal man," amrta- "immortal;" Avestan miriia- "to die," miryeite "dies," Old Persian martiya- "man;" Hittite mer- "to disappear, vanish," marnu- "to make disappear;" Armenian meranim "to die;" Greek marainein "to consume, exhaust, put out, quench," marasmus "consumption," emorten "died," brotos "mortal" (hence ambrotos "immortal"); Latin mors (genitive mortis) "death," mori "to die;" Armenian merani- "to die;" Gothic maurþr, Old English morþ "murder;" Old Irish marb, Welsh marw "dead;" Lithuanian mirti "to die," mirtis "death;" Old Church Slavonic mreti "to die," mrutvu "dead;" Russian mertvyj, Serbo-Croatian mrtav "dead."

https://www.etymonline.com/word/*mer-#:~:text=Proto%2DIndo%2DEuropean%20root%20meaning,%3B%20marasmus%3B%20mare%20(n.