Two very useful Latin phrases

This is from Wikipedia and there are many  more.These are used in maths,logic and philosophy.

tiff infomation
tiff infomation

 

a posteriori from the latter Based on observation (i.e., empirical evidence), the reverse of a priori. Used in mathematics and logic to denote something that is known after a proof has been carried out. In philosophy, used to denote something known from experience.
a priori from the former Presupposed independent of experience, the reverse of a posteriori. Used in mathematics and logic to denote something that is known or postulated before a proof has been carried out. In philosophy, used to denote something is supposed without empirical evidence. In everyday speech, it denotes something occurring or being known before the event

Give me acid or I’ll drop

 

Hemoglobin,hemoglobin, hemoglobin you are mine

I  am lost and gone for ever, smoke my grass and drink my wine.

Give me acid, folic acid, give me acid  don’t delay

I’m anaemic, don’t believe it, just you ask my doctor gay.

I have iron,I have iron; iron itself is not enough

Give me kale and brussels sprouts, serve me in the horse’s trough

My red blood cells, my red blood cells ,are too big to do their  work

Give me liver with no quiver;hurry now ,I’ll run amok

Give me citrus, give me acid, give me fortified real bread.

You get the picture? Hear my lecture, blimey .what the devil said

Haemoglobin

Photo by Mike Flemming.Copyright.

hemoglobin

image: http://cf.ydcdn.net/1.0.1.48/images/dictionaries/Wiktionary-logo.png

Noun(plural hemoglobins)

  1. The iron-containing substance in red blood cells that transports oxygen from the lungs to the rest of the body; it consists of aprotein (globulin), and haem (a porphyrin ring with an atom of iron at its centre).
OriginFrom Ancient Greek αἷμα (haima, “blood”) + Latin globus (“ball, sphere”) + -in.

English Wiktionary. Available under CC-BY-SA license.
Read more at http://www.yourdictionary.com/hemoglobin#4Tq8MTvm0BbBRQsT.99

The bridge swayed

Stepping onto that fragile bridge
Which swayed in the breeze,
Stepping onto that fragile bridge
Was a difficult moment
Though I could see you far away.
As we traveled,sometimes we walked,
Sometimes we walked too fast,
Or without paying due attention
To the winds that blew across the water.
Sometimes I felt afraid I would fall
As the bridge swayed too much over
The dark sea.Or you might fall or turn back.
Sometimes we stopped walking and stood waiting
As if some portent would appear
To tell us what to do.
Still, we continued, with trust growing
After each difficulty…
All at once, you were near me,
And I recognized your face..
That light in your eyes
And your hands holding the ropes..
So we stood there,over the churning waters,
And all I wanted to  do was to smile.
I wanted to smile.And I’m still smiling
Despite all the strains and trials…
And I see you are smiling too.

Greek word humor

Democracy, theocracy

How d’y’  spell  bureaucracy?

Demonstrate, remonstrate.

How ‘s your curiosity?

 

Epidemics,academics.

I write all  with these cheap  bics.

Pan-demics and pot-demics

Greek is funnier than the flicks.

Pancreatic  or dramatic;

If it fits  then I will click it.

Panoramic, photographic

Radios , all full of static.

Melodramatic,Can we crack it?

If  cathartic , we’ll all knick it.

Palindromic,testimonic,

If we write it let, them pick it

 

 

 

Democracy

4667087_f248

Take such gold and use it well

M2172256 [1024x768].JPG

This photo is by Mike Flemming .Copyright

 

One part of writing is to guess
which tool will suit your hand the best.
Know which  image  brings out joy,
as you new sentences employ.
Writing brings up treasures deep,
as do dreams whilst we’re asleep.
Take such gold and use it well
Ring out purely like a bell.
Wisdom comes from sharing views;
One viewpoint, our vision skews.

 

Note:William Blake :single vision