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Bill
Clinton and Monica Lewinsky
in Alphabetics
The words surrounding these names in the Webster's
English Dictionary depict scandal that rocked the United States capital in
1998. bilk, bill; lewd, Lewinsky.
Introduction
Alphabetics Word-Number Studies as a prophetic approach includes the method
of looking up a name in its alphabetical sequence in a dictionary and then
looking for commentary on that name by considering the words that appear
before and after it. This phenomenon is illustrated well around the
words "Bill," "Clinton," "Monica,"
"Lewinsky," and "Impeachment." Not only are the
vicinity words applicable, but they are thematic to the scandal that rocked
the United States capital in 1998.
Words around
"Bill" In English (Web.
III61)
| 1bilk 1. to block the free
development, functioning, or fulfillment of : BALK, CHECK,
DISAPPOINT, FRUSTRATE 2. to cheat out of what
is due : DEFRAUD : evade payment of especially by sly
underhanded methods : SWINDLE 3. to slip
away from : contrive to get away from.
2bilk an untrustworthy tricky
individual : CHEAT
>BILL
1bill 1. the jaws of a
bird together with their horny covering.
2bill 3. to caress
affectionately : show affection through fondling and kissing.
4bill 1. a written or
printed statement 2. a formal and usually written
petition 3. a draft of a law presented to a legislature
for enactment : a proposed or projected law.
6bill BULL [ox --
(rabbinical metaphor for God: example of juxtaposed opposite)]
7bill the cry of the bittern
billabong 1 b. a stream bed usually
dry but filled seasonally [compare #650 Heb. (juxtaposed
opposite)] 2. a backwater caused by overflow
from a river and forming a stagnant pool. |
Words Around
"Clinton" In English (Web.
III61)
| 1clinquant: 1.
SPANGLED, showily ornate
2clinquant: ; 1.
imitation gold leaf 2. something with a false and showy
glitter.
clint: 1. a hard or flinty rock.
>CLINTON
clintonia: 1. a genus of perennial
herbs having yellow or white flowers on a naked stalk in early
summer with the stalk sheathed below by the base of two to four oblong
or ovate leaves. |
Words Around
"Monica" In English (Web.
III61)
| monias (NL from Greek, solitary, from monos
alone, single) : a monotypic genus of Madagascan birds having a
longer bill and tail than members of the closely related genus Mesoenas.
>MONICA
monied: var of MONEYED
moniezia: 1. a genus of
cyclophayllidean tapeworms parasitizing the intestine of various
ruminants.
moniker: slang : NAME, NICKNAME |
Words Around
"Lewinsky" In English (Web. III61)
| lew: 1. moderately warm : LUKEWARM
lewd: 1.a. of,
relating to, or characteristic of common and ignorant people: VULGAR.
b. BASE, EVIL, WICKED -- used of persons
and their conduct c. POOR, WORTHLESS --
use of things. 2 a. sexually unchaste or licentious : DISSOLUTE,
LASCIVIOUS b suggestive of or tending to moral
looseness : inciting to sensual desire or imagination : INDECENT,
OBSCENE, SALACIOUS <moralists looked upon it as a ~
distraction --Lewis Mumford>
>LEWINSKY
lewis: an iron dovetailed tenon that is made in
sections, can be fitted into a dovetail mortise, and is used in hoisting
large stones. [e.g. gradual removal of the President
of the United States?] |
Words Around
"Impeachment" In English (Web. III61)
| impasse: 1. an impassable road 2
a. a predicament affording no obvious escape b.
deadlock.
impassion/impassioned: arouse the feelings or
passions of.
impassive: 1. devoid of passion, feeling, or
receptivity to impression.
...
impatience/impatient:
impatronize: to give or take possession of.
impavid: FEARLESS
impayable:
IMPEACH/IMPEACHMENT
impeccability/impeccable: [opp.] 1. not
capable of sinning 2. free from fault or blame.
. . .
impedance/impeded/impediment: to interfere with or
get in the way of the progress of; hold up; BLOCK.
impel: to urge or drive by force or constraint;
exert strong moral pressure on or affect with marked moral compulsion in
a particular direction.
impend/impending: this is about to occur.
impenetrability: 1 b. inaccessible to knowledge,
reason, sympathy; not to be moved by logic or other method of
persuasion.
impenitence/impenitent: not repenting of sin; not
contrite.
imperative |
by
Sterling D. Allan; Mapleton, Utah; January 8, 1998
See also:
Bibliography
 | Webster's
New International Dictionary, 3rd Ed.,
Unabridged; G. & C. Merriam Company (established, 1831), Springfield
2, Massachusetts, U.S.A.; 1961. |
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