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Please note, Ra was much later equated with Atum (for a period going under the title Atum-Ra). The Ennead were never associated with Ra originally. The Ennead never associated with Ra. Ennead means 9, when Ra and Atum became conflated, those who associated with Ra, as his co-journyers in his solar barque, were only 8, and were thus an Octad, not an Ennead. --Victim of signature fascism 22:23, 3 December 2005 (UTC)
What is the "great carnal power"? I don't see how this is carnal, ie related to the body or meat. Interlingua 04:56, 27 February 2006 (UTC)
Refer to the Bible, where 'god' the creator, in fact Satan, makes flesh.
This refers to all flesh whether humanoid or animal as we are interchangeable with animals and birds.
Hence the English expressions, "I'll turn you inside out and make you eat yourself."
And "Nice 'bird' (young woman) tasty Geezer (man as an edible animal) which reflects the Great Sphinx aka Abu Hol, the Father of Terror at Giza.
Geezer is also an antiquated name for a gas water heater as with a personified Jupiter as the Jovian 'god'.
We are - literally - what we eat, hence sometimes a woman is referred to as a cow.
Therefore our real creator, Satan, is referred to as being Sick And Twisted - SAT.
SAT an and SAT on have the same implication. The anus being the Satanic black hole where the Sun does NOT shine.
This is all well known in common vulgar parlance and is part and parcel of the vulgar Vulgate Mass.
All this is precisely why there is a celibacy. (Fear / Terrified.)
It is also why terrorism exists. But this is very subtle.
You either understand that or you don't.
It depends on how well you understand common parlance sexual rhetoric which is vulgar.
Anon 178.116.241.108 (talk) 13:07, 29 March 2012 (UTC)
Gods: (NtrNtrNtr) three vertical registers required in hieroglyphs | ||||||||||
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Unless someone knows different, it should be considered that the Ennead developed(Origin) with the origin of the Hieroglyphic writing, as three "registers" of hieroglyphs get one to 3 x 3, the Ennead. There is also the 'Gods of the 18 (name ?)', a double ennead. --......from the SonoranDesert of Arizona- ..Mmcannis 03:32, 1 January 2007 (UTC)
There has - always - been a second 'Ennead'.
The original Ennead, or Council of Nine has always had an equal and opposing Satanic counterpart. 9+9 = 18 the letters A & H a deliberate inference for anus.
See: Satanic Synagogues in Revelation 2:9 and references to red and black, living and dead as with all red and black games such as card packs, roulette and snooker.
Snooker come from 'snook' her. Have sex with. Snook is also a fish. See: Snooki as a hooker hooking a (fish) catch or Carpé Diem.
All part of common everyday vulgar sexual rhetoric.
Always, being a contraction of All ways also refers to all manner of sexual positions and to all the holes in the body which may be used for such a purpose.
'Normal', oral or anal it makes - NO - difference.
Another reason to understand that his is Satan's creation and god is just a 'smokescreen' used to fool us, as with an alias.
Anon 178.116.241.108 (talk) 13:19, 29 March 2012 (UTC)
An example of vertical registers of hieroglyphs shows the plural of "Gods" used 2-times. (from the ArizonaDeserts-on the New Year)- ...-Mmcannis 16:19, 1 January 2007 (UTC)
Is "Ennead" really more common in English than "Pesedjet"? I note that the article on Ra uses pesedjet and not ennead. Would the possibility of a move of this article to "Pesedjet" upset anyone? --Bejnar (talk) 06:07, 26 November 2008 (UTC)
It seems that "Pesedjet" should be its own article (taking much of the Terminology section with it), and that article should describe the various groupings of deities (Ennead, Ogdoad, et cætera). There should be plenty of information that can be entered into that new article, such as the most prominent groupings (and how those evolved over the dynasties). It also would provide a categorized reference of the Egyptian deities (cat. by their grouping) rather than only having the straight lists of deities which Wiki currently has (you can not see their associations with these "straight lists"). BTW, slightly annoying thing about Terminology section in this article is that it has a wiki link to "pesedjet" which only redirects right back to this article. — al-Shimoni (talk) 09:33, 12 September 2010 (UTC)
Yes although pesedjet=ennead=9 the Egyptians were not averse to adding or subtracting from the number of gods and still using the term - which implies that it became to mean something like 'company of gods' - for instance Horus is sometimes tagged on to the main Heliopolitan Ennead and there is something called the lesser Ennead which seems to include all sorts. I can find a ref for this I think but it is from memory.Apepch7 (talk) 23:06, 12 September 2010 (UTC)
After my attempt to fix the start of this article got reverted, I thought that I'd try here. I found the article when the NY Times gave as a definition of 'ennead' as a group of nine Egyptian deities, and tried to find out why. I thought that this article might be the locus, and wanted to let people know that that the English word 'ennead' refers more broadly than this.
So, let me make ask some questions to those who have a closer interest in this article. Why is there a capital epsilon in the Greek word? The upper case - lower case distinction is later than the word; in ancient times Greek was written only in upper case. Second, where did the 'the' come from, in "the nine"? It's not in the Greek, which would require an eta. I'll grant that 'ennead' is not a common word, but it's one that I know as a common noun.
It's a reasonable guess that you've got people thinking that the Greek word refers primarily to this group of gods. It doesn't. (Check it out in Liddell Scott Jones.) If you don't like my fix, shouldn't you come up with another? —Preceding unsigned comment added by Paul Asman (talk • contribs) 06:10, 3 October 2010 (UTC)
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"The Internet Classics Archive | The Six Enneads by Plotinus classics.mit.edu/Plotinus/enneads.html The Six Enneads By Plotinus Written 250 A.C.E.. Translated by Stephen Mackenna and B. S. Page. The Six Enneads has been divided into the following ..."
But who's counting?
David Lloyd-Jones (talk) 18:48, 12 July 2017 (UTC)
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