Armed And Extremely Dangerous

Armed And Extremely Dangerous
"READY FOR THE BATTLE"

Putting Fuel On The Fire

Tuesday, March 31, 2020

Come expecting

The word of the Lord came to me saying expect something from God this week there is  Unexpected financial gain coming this week. That Check you’ve been waiting for is coming this week that tax refund shall be deposited in your account this week. 

There shall not be no shut off notice from the electric and the water company that stimulus is coming this week because you’ve been faithful God is about to bless your socks off come expecting something daughter, come expecting something son. 

I will turn your mourning into dancing. I will peeled off your sackcloth and clothed you with joy. The joy of the Lord will be your strength.

Jeremiah 31:4
Again I will build you, and you will be rebuilt, O Virgin Israel. Again you will take up your tambourines and go out in joyful dancing.

Check your account that application is approved that job and tax refund is coming to your account. Come to Me Son Come to Me Daughter come  expecting something.

A decision has been made on your behalf. It has been determine. For you to Get rid of all your doubts.


Because you been faithful in you’re giving God is about to bless your socks off, come expecting something Daughter come  expecting something Son,  I AM the  Lord shall I not keep my promises. 
As I promised those of old to Come expecting something says, the Lord of hosts.

Your stimulus checks and your tax refund checks are coming. The money you been waiting for the decision is  made. Come to Me expecting something. Shall I not do what I say.

God is placing that check you been waiting for in your account this week. The decision has been made. Rebate tax returns are coming in the mail this week. 

Your electric bill and that water bill will be paid this week. Come to Me My Son My Daughter come expecting never under Estimate Me I AM your God the Alpha and Omega the beginning and the end I know all things and I bring all things to tuition have faith in Me son have faith in Me daughter turn your face towards Me turn your heart towards Me. I shall also turn My face towards you. 

Psalm 149:3
Let them praise His name in the dance: let them sing praises unto Him with the timbrel and harp. Let everything that had breath praise the Lord.

Dr. Prophet Christina Theresa Maxwell

Monday, March 30, 2020

My lover

The Word, of the Lord, came to me saying, Draw nigh to Me, so I may draw high to you Where are all My lovers says the Lord of Host In this hour My desire is for you to need me. 

Draw nigh to Me My dear children, draw nigh My Sons and Daughters I have a place in My heart for you, drew nigh to Me I will never leave nor forsake you. 

I AM God,The Supreme Being; Jehovah; the eternal and infinite Spirit living in My creation man became a living being when I breve  My breath into his nostrils. 

I AM God all by Myself I don’t need nobody’s help I can handle things on My own. I AM the first the last  the creator, and the sovereign King of the universe.

I AM Spirit ; and they that worship Me must worship Me  in Spirit  and in Truth.

I have given to those who are noble by birth beFore the creation before in the womb of their mother I knew them. I planted fields and land in the pureness of My realm.

The time of sunset, in the beginning was the word and the word was God and it became flesh in My only begotten Son.

My directions are given for the removal of uncleanness, serve for the purpose and removal of sin.

And when the Sun has set until the dawning of the Dewn. Orause me and I will show you of My glory. 

From the rising of the Sun unto the going down of the same. Love Me.

Do you not hear My Wrath when I speak in the thunder have your ears became full of wax that you can not hear. 

My sheep hear My voice. Where are My lovers gone. suddenly Turn from thy fierce wrath. 

Fear the Lird and keep His commandments which is the duty if men. 

The Amorites Fear God the creator of all nations The Alpha and Omega the beginning and the end. Do you not love me. 

And yes, I AM hurt My tears are like drops of blood for  when you walked out on Me. You kicked me out of your life. You put Me to the curb. 

You started serving pagan gods of this world. 

You have abandon your post.  I AM the true and living God. 

Where were you when I was in the moment of My creation. Where were you when I wanted to bless and prosper you. 

You have cheapened Me. When you were in your crises I was there. When you needed food and shelter I was there. I Am He the potter you are but clay. I was the gentlemen that open doors for you. 

I treated you as My Sons and My daughters. I treated you like A Diamond in the Rough' whose good qualities once hidden and it was I who brought you out. 

I AM He, the God of your Fathers who in My waiting demonstrated love by fire and the power of My Spirit.

John 15:1 AM The Vine and you are the Branches I am the true vine, and my Father is the gardener. 2 He cuts off every branch in me that bears no fruit, while every branch that does bear fruit he prunes so that it will be even more fruitful. 3 You are already clean because of the word I have spoken to you. 

4 Remain in me, as I also remain in you. No branch can bear fruit by itself; it must remain in the vine. Neither can you bear fruit unless you remain in me. AM the vine you are the branches

There was never an  incubation for you because My Spirit lived in you.  I love you with an everlasting love. 

But you treated me like your pimp. Where are My lovers. Now you have abandon Me because I won’t allow you to have those ungodly things. Those worldly things I despised. Where are My lovers. 

What have you done. For the blood of your sisters and brothers are stone cold. Stain in the streets of man humanity slane My sons and daughters dead bodies cried out to me. 

You killed them for  the smell is reaping from the grounds your standing on. 

Have I not told you that you are not welcome in My kingdom because of what you done to the least of these you also done unto Me. Matthew 25:35-40 King 

James 35 For I was hungred, and ye gave me meat: I was thirsty, and ye gave me drink: I was a stranger, and ye took me in:

36 Naked, and ye clothed me: I was sick, and ye visited me: I was in prison, and ye came unto me.

37 Then shall the righteous answer him, saying, Lord, when saw we thee an when not we fed thee? or thirsty, and gave thee drink?

38 When saw we thee a stranger, and took thee in? or naked, and clothed thee?

39 Or when saw we thee sick, or in prison, and came unto thee?

40And the King will reply, ‘Truly I tell you, whatever you did for one of the least of these brothers of Mine, you did for Me.’ 

41Then He will say to those on His left, ‘Depart from Me, you who are cursed, into the eternal fire prepared for the devil and his angels.… Therefore,  begone  I have never knew you. 

Repent shall I not cover you with feathers. Yet I love you. Where are My Lovers if you see than tell to call on Me and I will answer where are My lovers.

Dr.Prophet Christina Theresa Maxwell

Extra


The word gale is used by the poets for a moderate breeze, but seamen use it as equivalent to storm. Winds are denominated from the point of compass from which they blow; as a north wind; an east wind; a south wind; a west wind; a southwest wind, &c.The four winds, the cardinal points of the heavens.Come from the four winds, O breath, and breathe upon these slain. Ezekiel 37.This sense of the word seems to have had its origin with the orientals, as it was the practice of the Hebrews to give to each of the four cardinal points the name of wind.Direction of the wind from other points of the compass than the cardinal, or any point of compass; as a compass of eight winds.Breath; power of respiration.
If my wind were but long enough to say my prayers, I would repent.Air in motion form any force or action; as the wind of a cannon ball; the wind of a bellows.Breath modulated by the organs or by an instrument.
Their instruments were various in their kind, some for the bow, and some for breathing wind.Air impregnated with scent.A pack of dog-fish had him in the wind.Any thing insignificant or light as wind.Think not with wind or airy threats to awe.Flatulence; air generated in the stomach and bowels; as, to be troubled with wind.
The name given to a disease of sheep, in which the intestines are distended with air, or rather affected with a violent inflammation. 
It occurs immediately after shearing.Down the wind, decaying; declining; in a state of decay; as, he went down the wind. Not used.To take or have the wind, or to get wind, to be divulged; to become public. 
The story got wind, or took wind.In the winds eye, in seamens language, towards the direct point from which the wind blows.Between wind and water, denoting that part of a ships side or bottom which is frequently brought above water by the rolling of the ship, or fluctuation of the waters surface.
To carry the wind, in the manege, is when a horse tosses his nose as high as his ears.Constant or perennial wind, a wind that blows constantly from one point of the compass; as the trade wind of the tropics.
Shifting, variable or erratic winds, are such as are changeable, now blowing from one point and now from another, and then ceasing altogether.Stated or periodical wind, a wind that constantly returns at a certain time, and blows steadily from one point for a certain time. Such are the monsoons in India, and land and sea breezes.Trade wind, a wind that blows constantly from one point, such as the tropical wind in the Atlanti
This verse describes 
give an account in words of (someone or something), including all the relevant characteristics, qualities, or events.
"the man was described as tall, clean-shaven, and with short dark hair"

This verse describes winnowing, the period's  of time between successive occurrences of the same state in an oscillatory or cyclic phenomenon, 
Such as a mechanical vibration, an alternating current, a variable star, or an electromagnetic wave.
standard process for separating the wheat from the chaff. ... The wind would then blow away the lighter chaff allowing the edible grains to fall to the threshingfloor, a large flat surface. The unneeded chaff would then be burned.
fork is in His hand to thoroughly clear His threshing floor, and to gather the wheat into His barn; but He will burn up the chaff with unquenchable fire."

 She is most likely very popular and has a big ass. She struggleswith her relationships, but they always turn out to be right.
Have I not spoken I AM the  weapon form against your storm. I the Lord shall prosper you. I sort for My lovers and could not find none. Every tongue that rise up against you shall I not destroyed. I shall heal your land. I armed with the power of love just a little goes a long long way. You carry my power to live your enemies you carry My power to love your neighbors as yourself. 

 And when I speak My withering fork shall armed you for such a time as this. 

The second they touch you I shall torch them. if they speak on you I the Lord shall spike them. If their  eyes shut I shall pop them out of their eye lids. If there eyes shall roll at you I will closed then roll them as a d tobacco roll as rolls up a joint.

I the Lord have spoken. That which follows you are my angels. They will be on your right and left hand.I come to save you i come to set you as example of the goodness of My love.

To save you from the enemy. Those false prophet have spoke death over your life I the Lord shall slay them I shall tourch them when the come to touch you.  touch not my anointed and do My prophets no harm. 

There Shaw be an explosion of electricity or lightning; the report of a discharge of electrical fluid, that is, of its passage from one cloud to another, or from a cloud to the earth, or from the earth to a cloud. When this explosion is near to a person, the thunder is a rattling or clattering sound, and when distant, the sound is heavy and rumbling. The fact is in some degree the same with the report of a cannon. This sharpness or acuteness of the sound when near, and the rumbling murmur when distant, are the principal distinctions in thunder. Thunder is not lightning, but the effect of it. See Johnson's Dictionary, under thunder.There were thunders and lightnings. Ex.19.Thunder is used for lightning, or for a thunderbolt, either originally through ignorance, or by way of metaphor, or because the lightning and thunder are closely united.The revenging godsparricides all the thunder bend.Mmmk Any loud noise; as the thunder of cannon.Sons of thunder. Mark 3.Denunciation published; as the thunders of the Vatican. To be brought eventually; to result or terminate 

The number of the stimulus checks are a Very strong in numbers; Very strong or great in corporeal power fact or point he began to be a mighty one on the earth. 

I made a I turn This trade has not turned to much account or advantage. once a  mighty nation
great or strong; as mighty power Ex.10. Rev.6.

Very great; vast; as mighty waters. 

Wo to them that are mighty to drink wine. 

Is rushing with violence; as a mighty wind otempest.Ps.68.Vehement;Neh.9.Very. 2 Chron.26.Very forcible; efficacious; as, great is truth and mighty.Very great or eminent in intellect or acquirements; as the mighty . Violent; very loud; as mighty thunderings Very severe and distressing; as a mighty famine.

 Luke.15.Very great, large or populous; as a mighty city. wise; mighty thoughtful
momentous

.I'll sing of heroes and of kings,In mighty numbers mighty things.MI'GHTY, adv. In a great degree; very; as might .To change to acid Great; wonderful; performedA false god; a heathen deity; an idol.Very.

Judges 6. A prince; a ruler; a magistrate or judge; an angel. Thou shalt not revile the gods, nor curse the ruler of thy people.the LORD A master; a person possessing supreme power and authority; a ruler; a governor.

Man over man he made not lord.But now I was the lord of this fair mansion

A  tyrant; an oppressive rulerhusband.oft in bitterness of soul deplores my absent daughter, and my dearer lord.My lord also being old. Gen. 18. 

A baron; the proprietor of a manor; as the lord of the manor

.nobleman; a title of honor in Great Britain including dukes, marquises, earls, viscounts and barons. 

Archbishops and bishops also, as members of the house of lords, are lords of parliament. Thus we say, lords temporal and spiritual. 

By courtesy also the title is given to the sons of dukes and marquises, and to the eldest sons of earls.

An honorary title bestowed on certain official characters; as lord advocate,

 lord chamberlain, lord chancellor, lord chief justice, &c.In scripture, 

the Supreme Being; Jehovah. When Lord, in the Old Testament, is prints in capitals, it is the translation of JEHOVAH, and so might, with more propriety, be rendered. 

The word is applied to Christ, Ps. 110. Col. 3. and to the Holy Spirit, 2Thess. 3. As a title of respect, it is applied to kings, Gen. 40. 2Sam. 19. to princes and nobles, Gen 42. Dan. 4. to a husband, Gen. 18. to a prophet, 1Kings 18. 2Kings 2. and to a respectable person, Gen. 24. Christ is called the Lord of glory, 1Cor. 2. and Lord of lords, Rev. 19.
LORD, v.t. To invest with the dignity and privileges of a lord.
LORD, v.i. To domineer; to rule with arbitrary or despotic sway; sometimes followed by over, and sometimes by it, in the manner of a transitive verbThe whiles she lordeth in licentious bliss.I see them lording it in London streets.They lorded over them whom now they serve.

hath HAST, the second person singular of have, I have, thou hast, contracted from havest. It is used only in the solemn style.spoken
SPOKE, pret. of speak.SPOKE, n. G., this word, whose radical sense is to shoot or thrust, coincides with spike, spigot, pike, contracted from to spew.The radius or ray of a wheel; one of the small bars which are inserted in the hub or nave, and which serve to support the rim or felly.The spar or round of a ladder. Not in use in the United States.

and called 

CALL, v.t. Heb. To hold or restrain. In a general sense, to drive; to strain or force out sound. Hence,To name; to denominate or give a name. And God called the light day, and the darkness he called night. Gen. 1.To convoke; to summon; to direct or order to meet; to assemble by order or public notice; often with together; as, the king called his council together; the president called together the congress.To request to meet or come.He sent his servants to call them that were bidden. Math. 22To invite.Because I have called and ye refused. Prov. 1.To invite or summon to come or be present; to invite, or collect.Call all your senses to you.To give notice to come by authority; to command to come; as, call a servant.To proclaim; to name, or publish the name.Nor parish clerk, who calls the psalm so clear.To appoint or designate, as for an office, duty or employment.See, I have called by name Bezaleel. Ex. 31.Paul called to be an apostle. Rom. 1. To invite; to warn; to exhort. Is. 22:12.10. To invite or draw into union with Christ; to bring to know, believe and obey the gospel. Rev. 8:28To own and acknowledge. Heb. 2:11.To invoke or appeal to.I call God for a record. 2 Cor. 1.To esteem or account. Is. 47:5Mat. 3:15.To call down, to invite, or to bring down.To call back, to revoke, or retract; to recall; to summon or bring back.To call for, to demand, require or claim, as a crime calls for punishment; or to cause to grow. Ezek. 36. Also, to speak for; to ask; to request; as, to call for a dinner.To call in, to collect, as to call in debts or money; or to draw from circulation, as to call in clipped coin; or to summon together; to invite to come together; as, to call in neighbors or friends.To call forth, to bring or summon to action; as, to call forth all the faculties of the mind.To call off, to summon away; to divert; as, to call off the attention; to call off workmen from their employment.To call up, to bring into view or recollection; as, to call u the image of a deceased friend; also, to bring into action, or discussion; as, to call up a bill before a legislative body.To call over, to read a list, name by name; to recite separate particulars in order, as a roll of names.To call out, to summon to fight; to challenge; also, to summon into service; as, to call out the militia.To call to mind, to recollect; to revive in memory.
CALL, v.i.1. by name; to utter the name; sometimes with to.


to Hagar. Gen. 21.To stop, without intention of staying; to make a short stop; as, to call at the inn. 

This use Johnson supposes to have originated in the custom of denoting ones presence at the door by a call. It is common, in this phrase, to use at, as to call at 

the inn; or on, as to call on a friend. This application seems to be equivalent to speak, D. Kallen. Let us speak at this place.
To call on, to make a short visit to; also, to solicit payment, or make a demand of a debt. In a theological sense, to pray to or worship; as, to call on the name of the Lord. Gen. 4. To repeat solemnly.To call out, to utter a loud voice; to bawl; a popular use of the phrase.CALL, n.A vocal address, of summons or invitation; as, he will not come at a call.Demand; requisition; public claim; as, listen to the calls of justice or humanity.Divine vocation, or summons; as the call of Abraham.Invitation; request of a public body or society; as, a clergyman has a call to settle in the ministry.summons from heaven; impulse.St. Paul believed he had a call, when he persecuted the Christians.
Authority; command. A short visit; as, to make a call; to give one a call that is, a speaking to; D. Kallen. 
To give one a call, is to stop a moment and speak or say a word; or to have a short conversation with.Vocation; employment. In this sense calling is generally used.A naming; a nomination.Among hunters, a lesson blown on the horn, to comfort the hounds.Among seamen, a whistle or pipe, used by the boatswain and his mate, to summon the sailors to their duty.
The English name of the mineral called by the Germans tungsten or wolframAmong fowlers, the noise or cry of a fowl, or a pipe to call birds by imitating their voice.In legislative bodies, the call of the house, is a calling over the names of the members, to discover who is absent or for other purpose; a calling of names with a view to obtain answers from the person named..

Sunday, March 29, 2020

Judgement

The Word of the Lord came to me saying,

For this is the judgement of God. 

Everyone will publicly be rewarded, or condemned, for their conduct here upon the earth. 

For He will repay according to each one's deeds: to those who by patiently doing good seek for glory and honor and, 

But those who seek evil Turn from your wicked ways. You who carried jealousy in your heart who causes confusion between what I have joined together turn away from your evil ways says the Lord of hosts. 

Romans 2:7 To those who by patience in well-doing seek for glory and honor and immortality, he will give eternal life;

But woe to them who have altered my sanctuary with filter words I have this against you.

You have turned husband against wife and wife against husband turn away turn away.

My judgment is the change and shift the church back to me for you have lost your first love.

There is a shifting for my church this shall be a professional positional for the lukewarm church shift the church . 

Come back to me says the Lord of hosts. You have taken My diamonds and made them dull and lifeless.

Shall I not take the very breath from you. 

Dr Prophet Christina Theresa Maxwell

Hear God



For this is the judgement of God. 

Everyone will publicly be rewarded, or condemned, for their conduct here upon the earth. 

For He will repay according to each one's deeds: to those who by patiently doing good seek for glory and honor and, 

But those who seek evil Turn from your wicked ways. You who carried jealousy in your heart who causes confusion between what I have joined together turn away from your evil ways says the Lord of hosts. Romans 2:7 To those who by patience in well-doing seek for glory and honor and immortality, he will give eternal life;

But woe to them who have altered my sanctuary with filter words I have this against you.

You have turned husband against wife and wife against husband turn away turn away.

My judgment is the change and shift the church back to me for you have lost your first love.

There is a shifting for my church this shall be a professional positional for the lukewarm church shift the church . 

Come back to me says the Lord of hosts. You have taken My diamonds and made them dull and lifeless.

Shall I not take the very breath from you. 

. To have shift to change the way of my people.

You have shift my church to follow after pagan gods. That has filled my house woe unto you.  Who change good for evil. 

Choose ye this day who you shall serve man  or God. I have this against Your teaching have come to My ears with a stench. Your prophets lie to make them self’s great. 

You lift up the dung that make you powerless. When you lay hands on the sick  they are worse who due in die disbelief.

You who shift My words to please men. And your heart is full of jealousy rotting apples whose core is mildew. 

You who promote people instead of promoting who God call. You are men pleasers instead of God. 

Therefore I have this against you judgement have come upon that house for you have committed this against The Lord Your God the upper and downward swirl this is not your battle.

You have preponderate and you have change the state the balance turn the scale.  You have alter, the posture of the body . 

The face of my people is for shame and disgrace, 
Turn from your wicked ways or I shall come and expose you. 

You are a wayward church. I am true and living Vine. 

He will give eternal life; while for those who are self-seeking and who obey not the truth but wickedness, there will be wrath and fury. 

There will be anguish and distress for everyone who does evil, the Jew first and also the Greek You have  alter, My position(Romans2:6-9).extraordinary trials of secret crimes are done as by arms and single combat, you say that swords have been turned into ploughshares or beaten into ploughshares, you mean  a state of conflict between two or more groups of people has ended and a period of peace has begun. 

hot plowshares, it being imagined that 


You have made your own bibles and quoted them.You who put light for darkness and darkness for light.

God would work miracles to vindicate innocence. There Is a lost of words that you have for your God.but are my words heard even in the darkest hour says the Lord of Host. Do you hear God.

To you oh God it’s your Judgment will be public. 
Through my lies and drivetrains my awesrness that I see that you vonforsate for me you interview before me. God oh how I love you even when her it be evil. Eccles.12.The final trial of the human race,when God will decide the fate of every individual, and award sentence according to justice.For God shall bring every work into judgment, with every secret thing, whether it be good, or whet The angel of God called He shall utter in a loud voice the sound, I pray thee, turn the counsel of the ungodly. To alter or change to address a issue. To direct change for a certain purpose 

To revolve; to agitate To adapt the mind; chiefly in those who participle. in salvation . To change; to transform; as,to turn evil to good; to turn goods

 you said you gave up power, you said your hear me but you don’t. I desire to know before thee there no unswear prayer that you can see but I leave it mostly on me. 

Saturday, March 28, 2020

Confusion

Therr Is a lost of words but are my words heard even in the darkest hour  you said you gave up power, you said your hear me .i still desire to now before thee there no insnswer prayer that you can see but I leave it mostly on me. Through my lies and drivetrains my awesrness that I see that you vonforsate for me you interview before me. God oh how I love you even when 

For He will repay according to each one's deeds: to those who by patiently doing good seek for glory and honor and immortality, He will give eternal life; while for those who are self-seeking and who obey not the truth but wickedness, there will be wrath and fury. There will be anguish and distress for everyone who does evil, the Jew first and also the Greek (Romans 2:6-9).


Judgment will be public. Everyone will publicly be rewarded, or condemned, for their conduct here upon the earth. 


The angel of God called He shall utter in a loud voice the sound, I pray thee, turn the counsel of the ungodly. To adapt the mind; turn evil to good To change; to transform




To alter or change to address a issue. To direct change for a certain purpose To revolve; to agitate chiefly in those who participle. in salvation .; as,to; to turn goods  turn the sway of battle.


Turn  turn the body. o alter, as a position. To change or shift sides; to put the upper side downwards, or one side in the place of the other. When to advance, or stand, or


 cause to preponderate; to change the state of a balance; as, to turn the scale.  alter, as the posture of the body .


 To form; to shape; used in the participle; as a body finely turned.

As I look around I head is face to the ground the shame and disgrace around you I want you to know I am true. To you oh God it’s you 

Friday, March 27, 2020

If I got ticket


The angel of God called He shall utter in a loud voice the sound, I pray thee, turn the counsel of the ungodly. To alter or change to address a issue. To direct change for a certain purpose To revolve; to agitate To adapt the mind; chiefly in those who participle. in salvation . To change; to transform; as,to turn evil to good. change the state of a balance enabling someone or something to remain upright and steady.

Turn  turn the body. o alter, as a position. To change or shift sides; to put the upper side 



downwards, or one side in the place of the other. When to advance, or stand, or turn the sway of battle.To cause to preponderate; to; as, to turn the scale.  alter, as the posture of the body . To form; to shape; used in the participle; as a body finely turned. To alter; to be changed or transformed; as change of direction Let your bold .To move; to change posture My thoughts are turn'd on Peace  To change the mind To hold, as a vessel; as, the vessel contains a gallon. Hence, to have capacity; to be able to hold; applied to an empty vessel. .



I have turned my mind to the subject My thoughts are turn'd on peac

those ideas about in your mind. 30.


I have turned my mind to the subject




or object; to direct, as the inclination, thoughts or mind.in the mind.
 1. Very strong; valiant; bold; as a mighty man of valor. Judges 6.

Great; wonderful; performed with great power; as mighty works. Matt.11.Very severe and distressing; as a mighty famine powerful; having great command  very strong or vigorous; as a mighty arm. Very.



How could we

The Word of  the Lord came to me saying, How did we get to the place where there is such disrespect for God our Father. 

Where is the honor? How did we allow our flesh to dictate what we desire to have, and the things we do to achieve The gratification and satisfaction to quench our  thirst in our flesh

Where is the honor? 

The Bible tells us to walk not according to our flesh but walk totally in the Spirit. 

But if you keep on biting and devouring each other, watch out, or you will be consumed by each other. So I say, walk by the Spirit, and you will not gratify the desires of the flesh. For the flesh craves what is contrary to the Spirit, and the Spirit what is contrary to the flesh. They are opposed to each other, so that you do not do what you want.…

We compromise our Spirit thinking that we can take the chastisement that God gives us for our disobedience and call it a day. This I say then, Walk in the Spirit, and you shall not fulfill the lust of the flesh.

How is it that homosexuality is OK how we take for granted Gods love because He is love knowing  that the action is
 abomination that God hates. 

And we come boldly to the throne of grace with this action which is so disrespectful to God.

It’s like eating pork in front of someone that doesn’t eat even the smell of it, is disgusting but you continue to eat it in front of someone that gets sick to there stomach this is so disrespectful.

Do you really believe that you can change Gods mind. I the Lord do not change. He is the same yesterday as He is today.

You gone make God like what He hates and you continue to throw it up in His face so disrespectful.

Your sin separates you from God.

Isaiah 1:15
When you spread out your hands in prayer, I will hide My eyes from you; even though you multiply your prayers, I will not listen. Your hands are covered with blood.

For your hands are defiled with blood, and your fingers with iniquity; your lips have spoken lies, your tongue has muttered perverseness.

It’s is a Terrible stench it smells worse than the apes dung in zoo. It’s smell like Rigamortus dead person. I have smelled it on sinners. New members and people whose been in the church or sinners who wholloping in sin. 

We are so immaturely disrespectful to our Heavenly Father and all that He does for us how could we.

Dr.Prophet Christina Theresa Maxwell

Exhort God

The word of the Lord came to me saying, when you pray come to me with a clean heart, reknew the right spirit says the Lord of host. 

You come to Me with the blood of bulls and goats on your hands. You tell me that you love me but your heart is far from Me, says the Lord your God. 

Your  prayers are-hinder repent from your sin then I will hear from you.   Repent And I will heal your land says The Lord of host, ask and it shall be given seek and ye shall find. 

Luke 19:42-44
Saying, If thou hadst known, even thou, at least in this thy day, the things which belong unto thy peace! but now they are hid from thine eyes…

Luke 21:22-24
For these be the days of vengeance, that all things which are written may be fulfilled…

Luke 23:28-30
But Jesus turning unto them said, Daughters of Jerusalem, weep not for me, but weep for yourselves, and for your children…

Psalms 84:11
For the LORD God is a sun and shield; The LORD will give grace and glory; No good thing will He withhold From those who walk uprightly.

I will not withhold no good things from them in My name for forgiveness from sin awakes the heavens and the heavens awakes to hear the praises that goes to the throne of Gods Grace. 

Sing to the heavens oh heavens hear out loud , for the Lord hears the words from those who repent with a sincere heat. Sing to the LORD a New Song

He has remembered His love and faithfulness to the house of Israel; all the ends of the earth have seen the salvation of our God. Make a joyful noise to the 

LORD, all the earth; break forth— let your cry ring out and sing praises! Sing praises to the LORD with the lyre, in melodious song with the harp.…Sing to the LORD a New Song

Sing to the LORD with  trumpets and the blast of the ram’s horn shout for joy before the LORD, the King. 

Let the sea resound, and all that fills it, the world, and all who live in it. 

Let the rivers clap their hands, let the mountains sing together for joy…before  the LORD, for He comes to judge the earth. He will judge the world with righteousness and the peoples with equity.…

The LORD reigns, let the nations tremble! He is enthroned above the cherubim. Let the earth quake. Great is the LORD in Zion; He is exalted above all the peoples.Let them praise Your great and awesome name He is holy! Let mighty King loves justice. 

You have established equity; You have exercised justice and righteousness in Jacob.… Exhort the LORD our God, and worship at His footstool; He is holy!…

Dr Prophet Christina Theresa Maxwell

Which direction should I turn

To direct by a change to a certain purpose or object; to direct, as the inclination, thoughts or mind. I have turned my mind to the subject My thoughts are turn'd on peaceTo revolve; to agitate in the mind.Turn those ideas about in your mind. 30. To adapt the mind; chiefly in the participle. To alter; to be changed or transformed; as change of direction To move; to change posture. Let your body To hold, as a vessel; as, the vessel contains a gallon. Hence, to have capacity; to be able to hold; applied to an empty vessel. . 

Great; wonderful; performed with great power; as mighty works. Matt.11.Very severe and distressing; as a mighty famine. Luke.15. Very great, large or populous; as a mighty city. Rev.18.

Wednesday, March 25, 2020

Torneare

torneare: To turn  TURN, You change and then o change or alter in any manner; to from your wicked ways.return to Me says the Lord of Host. Have I not given you My mercy. turn one from a tory to whig To alter, as a position.    To change or alter from one purpose or effect to another.
To change; to transform; as, to turn evil to good; to turn goods into money.

Purge your conscious of dead works.

 If you obey and do these things I will turn My hourglass back but if not I shall turn my hourglass and I shall come quickly without reproach and destroy what you call sacred.. To alter or change I pray thee, turn the counsel God will make these evils the occasion of a greater good, by turning them to our advantage. To change direction to or from any point; as, to turn the eyes to the heavens; to turn the eyes from a disgusting spectacle. 

The Lord thy God will turn thy captivity, and have compassion upon thee. Deut.30. metamorphose pagan to a Christian.


The Sin and Punishment of Judah
10
I, the LORD, search the heart; I examine the mind to reward a man according to his way, by what his deeds deserve. 11Like a partridge hatching eggs it did not lay is the man who makes a fortune unjustly. In the middle of his day’s his riches will desert him, and in the end he will be the fool. 

Behold, the heaven and the heaven of heavens cannot contain thee. It is said a hen turns her eggs often when sitting.Turn from your wicked ways Sons of Zion. You are an army with hostile intentions; you enter My gates  as an enemy, To alter, the posture of the body,   bor
11You must not steal. You must not lie or deceive one another. 12You must notswear falsely by My name and so profanethe name of your God. I am the LORD.13You must not defraud your neighbor or rob him. You must not withhold until morning the wages due a hired hand.…

You change and shift  My body hustle your way on my church  you who desire to enter into My house.  Whose side are you on you cannot muscle the horse you cannot walk in darkness then decide you want to walk in the light then walk in darkness again turn from your evil ways. 

17Elders who lead effectively are worthy of double honor, especially those who work hard at preaching and teaching. 18For the Scripture says, “Do not muzzlean ox while it is treading out the grain,”and, “The worker is worthy of his wages.”19Do not entertain an accusation against an elder, except on the testimony of two or three witnesses.… to put a muzzle on (an animal or its mouth) so as to prevent biting, eating, etc.to restrain from speech, the expression of opinion, etc.: The censors muzzled the press. Nauticalto attach the cable to the stock of (an anchor) by means of a light line to permit the anchor to be pulled loose readily.1 Timothy 5:18“For the scripture saith, Thou shalt not muzzle The mouth of a thing; the extreme or end for entrance or discharge; applied chiefly to the end of a tube, as the open end of a common fusee or pistol,or of a bellows.A fastening for the mouth which hinders from biting.With golden muzzles all their mouths were bound.

MUZ'ZLE, v.t. To bind the mouth; to fasten the mouth to prevent biting or eating.Thou shalt not muzzle the ox when he treadeth out the corn. Deut.25.To fondle with the mouth close. Low.To restrain from hurt.My dagger muzzled--

MUZ'ZLE, v.i. To bring the mouth near.The bear muzzles and smells to him. Deuteronomy 25:4 as a law to insure that an ox being made to work a field would be allowed to freely eat of that field that he might keep his strength up and be rewarded for his labor.

the ox The male of the bovine genus of quadrupeds, castrated and grown to his size or nearly so. The young male is called in America a steer. The same animal not castrated is called a bull. These distinctions are well established with us in regard to domestic animals of this genus. When we speak of wild animals of this kind, ox is sometimes applied both to the male and female, and in zoology, the same practice exists in regard to the domestic animals. Sop in common usage, a pair of bulls yoked may be sometimes called oxen. We never apply the name ox to the cow or female of the domestic kind. Oxen in the plural may comprehend both the male and female.

that treadeth 

  • "Rev 19: 15 And out of his mouth goeth a sharp sword, that with it he should smite the nations: and he shall rule them with a rod of iron: and he treadeth the winepress of the fierceness and wrath of Almighty God."An example of this would be the King James Bible, an old English Translation, where it says in 1 Corinthians 9:9 “…Thou shalt not muzzle the mouth of the ox that treadeth out the corn And out of his mouth goeth a sharp sword, that with it he should smite the nations: and he shall rule them with a rod of iron: and he treadeth the winepress of the fierceness and wrath of Almighty God.""out OUT, adv.Without; on the outside; not within; on the exterior or beyond the limits of any inclosed place or given line; opposed to in or within; as, to go out and come in; to rush out.Abroad; not at home. The master of the house is out; a colloquial phrase for gone out. In a state of disclosure or discovery. The secret is out, that is, has come out, is disclosed. We shall find out the rogue.Not concealed.When these are gone, the woman will be out.In a state of extinction. The candle or the fire is out.In a state of being exhausted. The wine is out.In a state of destitution. We are out of bread corn.Not in office or employment. I care not who is in or who is out. He is out of business.Abroad or from home, in a party, at church, in a parade, &c. He was not out today. The militia companies are out. The man was out in a frolic last night.To the end.Hear me out.Loudly; without restraint; as, to laugh out.Not in the hands of the owner. The land is out upon a lease.In an error.As a musician that will always play, and yet ialways out at the same note.At a loss; in a puzzle.have forgot my part, and I am out.15. Uncovered; with clothes torn; as, to be out at the knees or elbows. Away, so as to consume; as, to sleep out the best time in the morning.17. Deficient; having expended. He was out of pocket. He was out fifty pounds.18. It is used as an exclamation with the force of command, away; begone; as, out with the dog.Out upon you, out upon it, expressions of dislike or contempt.Out is much used as a modifier of verbs; as, to come out, to go out, to lead out, to run out, to leak out, to creep out, to flow out, to pass out, to look out, to burn out, to cut out, to saw out, to grow out, to spin out, to write out, to boil out, to beat out, &c. bearing the sense of issuing, extending, drawing from, separating, bringing to open view, or in short, the passing of a limit that incloses or restrains; or bearing the metaphorical sense of vanishing, coming to an end.Out of. In this connection, out may be considered as adverb, and of as a preposition. Proceeding from; as produce. Plants grow out of the earth. He paid me out of his own funds.Keep thy heart with all diligence, for out of it are the issues of life. Prov. 4.Out of the same mouth proceedeth blessing and cursing. James 3.From or proceeding from a place, or the interior of a place; as, to take any thing out of the house. Mark 13.Beyond; as out of the power of fortune.They were astonished out of measure. Mark 10.From, noting taking or derivation.To whom he expounded and testified the kingdom of God, persuading them concerning Jesus, both out of the law of Moses, and out of the prophets. Acts 28.Not in, noting extraordinary exertion.Be instant in season, out of season. 2Tim. 4.Not in, noting exclusion, dismission, departure, absence or dereliction; as out of favor; out of use; out of place; out of fashion.Not in, noting unfitness or impropriety. He is witty out of season. The seed was sown out of season.Not within, noting extraordinary delay; as, a ship is out of time.Not within; abroad; as out of the door or house. From, noting copy from an original; as, to cite or copy out of Horace.From, noting rescue or liberation; as, to be delivered out of afflictions.Christianity recovered the law of nature out of all those errors.Not in, noting deviation, exorbitance or irregularity. This is out of all method; out of all rule. He goes out of his way to find cause of censure. He is out of order.From, noting dereliction or departure. He will not be flattered or frightened out of his duty. He attempted to laugh men out of virtue.From, noting loss or change of state. The mouth is out of taste; the instrument is out of tune.Not according to, noting deviation; as, he acts or speaks out of character.Beyond; not within the limits of; as, to be out of hearing, out of sight, out of reach. Time out of mind, is time beyond the reach of memory.Noting loss or exhaustion, as, to be out of breath.Noting loss; as out of hope.By means of.Out of that will I cause those of Cyprus to mutiny.In consequence of, noting the motive, source or reason.What they do not grant out of the generosity of their nature, they may grant out of mere impatience.So we say, a thing is done out of envy, spite or ambition.Out of hand, immediately, as that is easily used which is ready in the hand.Gather we our forces out of hand.Out of print, denotes that a book is not in market, or to be purchased; the copies printed having been all sold.
  • OUT, v.t To eject; to expel; to deprive by expulsion.The French having been outed of their holds.In composition, out signifies beyond, more, ejection or extension.For the participles of the following compounds, see the simple verbs.

  • the corn. 

  • And, The labourer isworthy of his reward.”

1 Corinthians 9:9 For it is written in the law of Moses, Thou shalt not muzzle the mouth of the ox that treadeth out the corn. Doth God take care for oxen?”





You plunder; and lead to attack My body's immune system, The immune system responds by working very hard to fight off the invader. 

There shall be seditions among men and invading one another  view to conquest or which normally fights infections, overreacts to proteins in egg. attack; to infringe; to encroach on; to violate. The king invaded the rights and privileges of the people, and the people invaded the prerogatives of the king.
To fall on; to attack; to seize; as a disease This causes an allergic reaction.To cause to preponderate; to change the state of a balance; as, to turn the scale. 


n the place of the other. When to advance, or stand, or turn the sway of battle. 


To bring the inside out




as,to turn a coat. or direction of the look.



 torneare, tornire, to turn, to fence round, to tilt; torniamento, tournament.

1. To cause to move in a circular course; as, to turn a wheel; to turn a spindle;

 

to put the upper side 

downwards, or one side i

4.


6.

The monarch turns him to his royal guest.

7. To form on a lathe; to make round.

8. To form; to shape; used in the participle; as a body finely turned.

Him limbs how turn'd.

9.

Impatience turns an ague into a fever.

of Ahithophel into foolishness. 2 Sam.15.

10. To; as, to turn a worm into a winged insect.

11, as color; as, to turn green to blue.

12. Tvary.

13. To translate; as, to turn Greek into English.

--Who turns a Persian tale for half a crown.

14. To change, as the manner of writing; as,to turn prose into verse.

15. To change, as from one opinion or party to another; as, to; to turn Mohammedan or a

16. To change in regard to inclination or temper.

Turn thee to me, and have mercy upon me. Ps.25.

17.

18. To transfer.

Therefore he slew him, and turned the kingdom to David. 1 Chron 10.

19. To cause to nauseate or lothe; as, to turn the stomach.

20. To make giddy.

Eastern priests in giddy circles run,

And turn their heads to imitate the sun.


2. To comprehend; to hold within specified limits.




25. To bend from a perpendicular direction; as, to turn the edge of an instrument.

26. To move from a direct course or strait line; to cause to deviate; as, to turn a horse from the road, or a ship from her course.

27. To apply by a change of use.

When the passage is open, land will be turned most to cattle.

28. To reverse.

29. To keep passing and changing in the course of trade; as, to turn money or stock two or three times in the year.


He was perfectly well turned for trade.

31. To make acid; to sour; as, to turn cider or wine; to turn milk.

32. To persuade to renounce an opinion; to dissuade from a purpose, or cause to change sides. You cannot turn a firm man.

To turn aside, to avert.

To turn away, to dismiss from service; to discard; as, to turn away a servant.

1. To avert; as, to turn away wrath or evil.

To turn back, to return; as, to turn back goods to the seller. Little used.

To turn down, to fold or double down.

To turn in, to fold or double; as, to turn in the edge of cloth.

To turn off, to dismiss contemptuously; as, to turn off a sycophant or parasite.

1. To give over; to resign. We are not so wholly turned off from that reversion.

2. To divert; to deflect; as, to turn off the thoughts from serious subjects.

To be turned of, to be advanced beyond; as, to be turned of sixty six.

To turn out, to drive out; to expel; as, to turn a family out of doors, or out of the house.

1. To put to pasture; as cattle or horses.

To turn over, to change sides; to roll over.

1. To transfer; as, to turn over a business to another hand.

2. To open and examine one leaf after another; as, to turn over a concordance.

3. To overset.

turn to, to have recourse to.

Helvetius' tables may be turned to on all occasions.

To turn upon, to retort; to throw back; as, to turn the arguments of an opponent upon himself.

To turn the back, to flee; to retreat. Ex.23.

To turn the back upon, to quit with contempt; to forsake.

To turn the die or dice, to change fortune.

TURN, v.i. To move round; to have a circular motion; as, a wheel turns on its axis; a spindle turns on a pivot; a man turns on his heel.

1. To be directed.

The understanding turns inwards on itself, and reflects on its own operations.

2. To show regard by directing the look towards any thing.

Turn mighty monarch, turn this way;

Do not refuse to hear.

3. To move the body round. He turned to me with a smile.

4. be at rest; do not turn in the least.

5. To deviate; as, to turn from the road or course.

6., wood turns to stone; water turns to ice; one color turns to another.

7. To become by change; as, the fur of certain animals turns in winter.

Cygnets from gray turn white.

8. To change sides. A man in a fever turns often.

9. To change opinions or parties; as, to turn Christian or Mohammedan.

10. To change the mind or conduct.

Turn from thy fierce wrath. Ex.32.

11. To change to acid; as,mild turns suddenly during a thunder storm.

12. To be brought eventually; to result or terminate in. This trade has not turned to much account or advantage. The application of steam turns to good account, both on land and water.

13. To depend on for decision. The question turns on a single fact or point.

14. To become giddy.

I'll look no more,

Lest my brain turn.

15. To change a course of life; to repent.

Turn ye, turn ye from your evil ways, for why will ye die? Ezek. 33.

16. To change the course or direction; as, the tide turns.

To turn about, to move the face to another quarter.

To turn away, to deviate.

1. To depart from; to forsake.turn in, to bend inwards.

1. To enter for lodgings or entertainment. Gen.19.

2. To go to bed.

To turn off, to be diverted; to deviate from a course. The road turns off to the left.

To turn on or upon, to reply or retort.

1. To depend on.

To turn out, to move from its place, as a bone.

1. To bend outwards; to project.

2. To rise from bed; also, to come abroad.

To turn over, to turn from side to side; to roll; to tumble.

1. To change sides or parties.

To turn to, to be directed; as, the needle turns to the magnetic pole.

To turn under, to bend or be folded downwards.

To turn up, to bend or be doubled upwards.

TURN, n. The act of turning; movement or motion in a circular direction, whether horizontally, vertically or otherwise; a revolution; as the turn of a wheel.

1. A winding; a meandering course; a bend or bending; as the turn of river.

2. A walk to and from.

I will take a turn in your garden.

3. Change; alteration; vicissitude; as the turns and varieties of passions.

Too well the turns of mortal chance I know.

4. Successive course.

Nobleness and bounty--which virtues had their turns in the king's nature.

5. Manner of proceeding;. This affair may take a different turn from that which we expect.

6. Chance; hap; opportunity.

Every one has a fair turn to be as great as he pleases.

7. Occasion; incidental opportunity.

An old dog falling from his speed, was loaded at every turn with blows and reproaches.

8. Time at which, by successive vicissitudes, any thing is to be had or done. They take each other's turn.

His turn will come to laugh at you again.

9. Action of kindness or malice.

Thanks are half lost when good turns are delay'd.

Some malicious natures place their delight in doing ill turns.

10. Reigning inclination or course. Religion is not to be adapted to the turn and fashion of the age.

11. A step off the ladder at the gallows.

12. Convenience; occasion; purpose; exigence; as, this will not serve his turn.

13. Form; cast; shape; manner; in a literal or figurative sense; as the turn of thought; a man of a sprightly turn in conversation.

The turn of his thoughts and expression is unharmonious.

Female virtues are of a domestic turn.

The Roman poets, in their description of a beautiful man, often mention the turn of his neck and arms.

14. Manner of arranging words in a sentence.

15. Change; new position of things. Some evil happens at every turn of affairs.

16. Change of direction; as the turn of the tide from flood to ebb.

17. One round of a rope or cord.

18. In mining, a pit sunk in some part of a drift.

19. Turn or tourn, in law. The sheriff's turn is a court of record, held by the sheriff twice a year in every hundred within his county. England.

By turns, one after another; alternately.

They assist each other by turns.

1. At intervals.

They feel by turns the bitter change.

To take turns, to take each other's places alternately.


hourglass 

an invertible device with two connected glass bulbs containing sand that takes an hour to pass from the upper to the lower bulb.

an invertible capable of being inverted or subjected to inversion

device DEVICE, n. L.

1. That which is formed by design, or invented; scheme; artificial contrivance; stratagem; project; sometimes in a good sense; more generally in a bad sense, as artifices are usually employed for bad purposes.

In a good sense:

His device is against Babylon, to destroy it. Jeremiah 51.

In a bad sense:

He disappointeth the devices of the crafty. Job 5.

They imagined a mischievous device. Psalm 212.

2. An emblem intended to represent a family, person, action or quality, with a suitable motto; used in painting, sculpture and heraldry. It consists in a metaphorical similitude between the things representing and represented, as the figure of a plow representing agriculture.

Knights-errant used to distinguish themselves by devices on their shields.

3. Invention; genius; faculty of devising; as a man of noble device.

4. A spectacle or show.


with two connected 

  • 1. 
    brought together or into contact so that a real or notional link is established.
    "a connected series of cargo holds"
  • 2. 
    associated or related in some respect.
    "a series of connected stories"

  • glass 

    GlassGlass is a state of matter. It is a solid produced by cooling molten material so that the internal arrangement of atoms, or molecules, remains in a random or disordered state, similar to the arrangement in a liquid. Such a solid is said to be amorphous or glassy.


    bulbs a rounded underground storage organ present in some plants, notably those of the lily family, consisting of a short stem surrounded by fleshy scale leaves or leaf bases, lying dormant over winter.


    containing 1.


     1 Kings 8.

    3. To comprehend; to comprise. The history of Livy contains a hundred and forty books.

    4. To hold within limits prescribed; to restrain; to withhold from trespass or disorder.

    The Kings person contains the unruly people from evil occasions.

    Fear not, my Lord, we can contain ourselves.

    5. To include. This article is not contained in the account. This number does not contain the article specified.

    6. To inclose; as, this cover or envelop contains a letter.

    CONTAIN, v.i. To live in continence or chastity. Arbuthnot and Pope. 1 Corinthians 7.



    sand 1. Any mass or collection of fine particles of stone, particularly of fine particles of silicious stone, but not strictly reduced to powder or dust.

    That finer matter called sand, is no other than very small pebbles.

    2. Sands, in the plural, tracts of land consisting of sand, like the deserts of Arabia and Africa; as the Lybian sands.

    SAND, v.t.

    1. To sprinkle with sand. It is customary among the common people in America, to sand their floors with white sand.

    2. To drive upon the sand.


    that takes TAKE, v.t. pret. took; pp. taken. L. doceo. This word seems to be allied to think, for we say, I think a thing to be so, or I take

    it to be so. It seems also to be allied to Sax.teogan, to draw, to tug, L. duco; for we say, to take a likeness, and to draw a likeness. We use taking also for engaging, attracting. We say, a child takes to his mother or nurse, and a man takes to drink; which seem to include attaching and holding. We observe that take and teach are radically the same word.

    1. In a general sense, to get hold or gain possession of a thing in almost any manner, either by receiving it when offered, or by using exertion to obtain it. Take differs from seize, as it does not always imply haste, force or violence. It more generally denotes to gain or receive into possession in a peaceable manner, either passively or by active exertions. Thus,

    2. To receive what is offered.

    Then I took the cup at the Lord's hand. Jer.25.

    3. To lay hold of; to get into one's power for keeping.

    No man shall take the nether or the upper millstone to pledge. Deut.24.

    4. To receive with a certain affection of mind. He takes it in good part; or he takes it very ill.

    5. To catch by surprise or artifice; to circumvent.

    Men in their loose unguarded hours they take,

    Not that themselves are wise, but others weak.

    6. To seize; to make prisoner. The troops entered, slew and took three hundred janizaries.

    This man was taken of the Jews. Acts.23.

    7. To captivate with pleasure; to engage the affections; to delight.

    Neither let her take thee with her eyelids. Prov.6.

    Cleombrotus was to taken with this prospect, that he had no patience.

    8. To get into one's power by engines or nets; to entrap; to ensnare; as, to take foxes with traps; to take fishes with nets, or with hook and line.

    9. To understand in a particular sense; to receive as meaning. I take your meaning.

    You take me right.

    Charity, taken in its largest extent, is nothing else but the sincere love to God and our neighbor.

    10. To exact and receive.

    Take no usury of him or increase. Lev.25.

    11. To employ; to occupy. The prudent man always takes time for deliberation, before he passes judgment.

    12. To agree to; to close in with; to comply with.

    I take thee at thy word.

    13. To form and adopt; as, to take a resolution.

    14. To catch; to embrace; to seize; as, to take one by the hand; to take in the arms.

    15. To admit; to receive as an impression; to suffer; as, to take a form or shape.

    Yet thy moist clay is pliant to command;

    Now take the mold--

    16. To obtain by active exertion; as, to take revenge or satisfaction for an injury.

    17. To receive; to receive into the mind.

    They took knowledge of them that they had been with Jesus. Acts.4.

    It appeared in his face that he took great contentment in this our question.

    18. To swallow, as meat or drink; as, to take food; to take a glass of wine.

    19. To swallow, as medicine; as, to take pills; to take stimulants.

    20. To choose; to elect. Take which you please. But the sense of choosing, in this phrase, is derived from the connection of take with please. So we say, take your choice.

    21. To copy.

    Beauty alone could beauty take so right.

    22. To fasten on; to seize. The frost has taken the corn; the worms have taken the vines.

    Wheresoever he taketh him, he teareth him, and he foameth-- Mark 9.

    23. To accept; not to refuse. He offered me a fee, but I would not take it.

    Ye shall take no satisfaction for the life of a murderer. Num.35.

    24. To adopt.

    I will take you to me for a people. Ex.6.

    25. To admit.

    Let not a widow be taken into the number under threescore. 1 Tim 5.

    26. To receive, as any temper or disposition of mind; as, to take shame to one's self; to take delight; to take pride or pleasure.

    27. To endure; to bear without resentment; or to submit to without attempting to obtain satisfaction. He will take an affront from no man. Cannot you take a jest?

    28. To draw; to deduce.

    The firm belief of a future judgment is the most forcible motive to a good life, because taken from this consideration of the most lasting happiness and misery.

    29. To assume; as, I take the liberty to say.

    30. To allow; to admit; to receive as true, or not disputed; as, to take a thing for granted.

    31. To suppose; to receive in thought; to entertain in opinion; to understand. This I take to be the man's motive.

    He took that for virtue and affection which was nothing but vice in disguise.

    You'd doubt his sex, and take him for a girl.

    32. To seize; to invade; as, to be taken with a fever.

    33. To have recourse to; as, the sparrow takes a bush; the cat takes a tree. In this sense, we usually say, the bird takes to a bush, the squirrel takes to a tree.

    34. To receive into the mind.

    Those do best, who take material hints to be judged by history.

    35. To hire; to rent; to obtain possession on lease; as, to take a house or farm for a year.

    36. To admit in copulation.

    37. To draw; to copy; to paint a likeness; as a likeness taken by Reynolds.

    38. To conquer and cause to surrender; to gain possession of by force or capitulation; as, to take an army, a city or a ship.

    39. To be discovered or detected. He was taken in the very act.

    40. To require or be necessary. It takes so much cloth to make a coat.

    To take away, to deprive of; to bereave; as a bill for taking away the votes of bishops.

    By your own law I take your life away.

    1. To remove; as, to take away the consciousness of pleasure.

    To take care, to be careful; to be solicitous for.

    Doth God take care for oxen? 1 Cor.9.

    1. To be cautious or vigilant.

    To take care of, to superintend or oversee; to have the charge of keeping or securing.

    To take a course, to resort to; to have recourse to measures.

    The violence of storming is the course which God is forced to take for the destroying of sinners.

    To take one's own course, to act one's pleasure; to pursue the measures of one's own choice.

    To take down, to reduce; to bring lower; to depress; as, to take down pride, or the proud.

    1. To swallow; as, to take down a potion.

    2. To pull down; to pull to pieces; as, to take down a house or a scaffold.

    3. To write; as, to take down a man's words at the time he utters them.

    To take from, to deprive of.

    I will smite thee, and take thine head from thee. 1 Sam.17.

    1. To deduct; to subtract; as, to take one number from another.

    2. To detract; to derogate.

    To take heed, to be careful or cautious.

    Take heed what doom against yourself you give.

    To take heed to, to attend to with care. Take heed to thy ways.

    To take hold, to seize; to fix on.take in, to inclose; to fence.

    1. To encompass or embrace; to comprise; to comprehend.

    2. To draw into a smaller compass; to contract; to brail or furl; as, to take in sail.

    3. To cheat; to circumvent; to gull. Not elegant.

    4. To admit; to receive; as, a vessel will take in more water. The landlord said he could take in no more lodgers.

    5. To win by conquest. Not in use.

    6. To receive into the mind or understanding.

    Some bright genius can take in a long train of propositions.

    To take in hand, to undertake; to attempt to execute any thing. Luke 1.

    To take notice, to observe; or to observe with particular attention.

    1. To show by some act that observation is made; to make remark upon. He heard what was said, but took no notice of it.

    To take oath, to swear with solemnity, or in a judicial manner.

    To take off, to remove, in various ways; to remove from the top of any thing; as, to take off a load; to take off one's hat, &c.

    1. To cut off; as, to take off the head or a limb.

    2. To destroy; as, to take off life.

    3. To remove; to invalidate; as, to take off the force of an argument.

    4. To withdraw; to call or draw away.

    Keep foreign ideas from taking off the mind from its present pursuit.

    5. To swallow; as, to take off a glass of wine.

    6. To purchase; to take from in trade.

    The Spaniards having no commodities that we will take off--

    7. To copy.

    Take off all their models in wood.

    8. To imitate; to mimic.

    9. To find place for; as more scholars than preferments can take off.

    To take off from, to lessen; to remove in part. This takes off from the deformity of vice.

    To take order with, to check. Not much used.

    To take out, to remove from within a place; to separate; to deduct.

    1. To draw out; to remove; to clear or cleanse from; as, to take out a stain or spot from cloth; to take out an unpleasant taste from wine.

    To take part, to share. Take part in our rejoicing.

    To take part with, to unite with; to join with.

    To take place, to happen; to come, or come to pass.

    1. To have effect; to prevail.

    Where arms take place, all other pleas are vain.

    To have effect; to prevail.

    Where arms take place, all other pleas are vain.

    To take effect, to have the intended effect; to be efficacious.

    To take root, to live and grow; as a plant.

    1. To be established; as principles.

    To take up, to lift; to raise.

    1. To buy or borrow; as, to take up goods to a large amount; to take up money at the bank.

    2. To begin; as, to take up a lamentation. Ezek. 19.

    3. In surgery, to fasten with a ligature.

    4. To engross; to employ; to engage the attention; as, to take up the time.

    5. To have final recourse to.

    Arnobius asserts that men of the finest parts took up their rest in the christian religion.

    6. To seize; to catch; to arrest; as, to take up a thief; to take up vagabonds.

    7. To admit.

    The ancients took up experiments upon credit.

    8. To answer by reproof; to reprimand.

    One of his relations took him up roundly.

    9. To begin where another left off.

    Soon as the evening shades prevail,

    The moon takes up the wondrous tale.

    10. To occupy; to fill; as, to take up a great deal of room.

    11. To assume; to carry on or manage for another; as, to take up the quarrels of our neighbors.

    12. To comprise; to include.

    The noble poem of Palemon and Arcite--takes up seven years.

    13. To adopt; to assume; as, to take up current opinions.

    They take up our old trade of conquering.

    14. To collect; to exact a tax.

    15. To pay and receive; as, to take up a note at the bank.

    To take up arms,

    To take arms, To begin war; to begin resistance by force.

    To take upon, to assume; to undertake. He takes upon himself to assert that the fact is capable of proof.

    1. To appropriate to; to admit to be imputed to; as, to take upon one's self a punishment.

    take side, to join one of two differing parties; to take an interest in one party.

    To take to heart, to be sensibly affected by; to feel any thing sensibly.

    To take advantage of, to catch by surprise; or to make use of a favorable state of things to the prejudice of another.

    To take the advantage of, to use any advantage offered.

    To take air, to be divulged or made public; to be disclosed; as a secret.

    To take the air, to expose one's self to the open air.

    To take a course, to begin a certain direction or way of proceeding.

    To take leave, to bid adieu or farewell.

    To take breath, to rest; to be recruited or refreshed.

    To take aim, to direct the eye or a weapon to a particular object.

    To take along, to carry, lead or convey.

    To take a way, to begin a particular course or direction.

    TAKE, v.i. To move or direct the course; to resort to, or to attach one's self; to betake one's self. The fox being hard pressed took to the hedge. My friend has left his music and taken to books.

    The defluxion taking to his breast, wasted his lungs.

    1. To please; to gain reception. The play will not take, unless it is set off with proper scenes.

    Each wit may praise it for his own dear sake,

    And hint he writ it, if the thing should take.

    2. To have the intended or natural effect.

    In impressions from mind to mind, the impression taketh.

    3. To catch; to fix, or be fixed. He was inoculated, but the infection did not take.

    When flame taketh and openeth, it giveth a noise.

    To take after, to learn to follow; to copy; to imitate; as, he takes after a good pattern.

    1. To resemble; as, the son takes after his father.

    To take in with, to resort to.

    To take for, to mistake; to suppose or think one thing to be another.

    The lord of the land took us for spies. Gen.42.

    take on, to be violently affected; as, the child takes on at a great rate.

    1. To claim, as a character.

    I take not on me here as a physician.

    To take to, to apply to; to be fond of; to become attached to; as, to take to books; to take to evil practices.

    1. To resort to; to betake to.

    Men of learning who take to business, discharge it generally with greater honesty than men of the world.

    To take up, to stop.

    Sinners at last take up and settle in a contempt of all religion. Not in use.

    1. To reform. Not in use.

    To take up with, to be contented to receive; to receive without opposition; as, to take up with plain fare.

    In affairs which may have an extensive influence on our future happiness, we should not take up with probabilities.

    1. To lodge; to dwell. Not in use.

    To take witan hour 


    HOUR, n. our. L. hora; also L. tempestivus, from tempus. See Time. But hour, hora, afterward came to signify a certain portion or division of the day. This has been different in different nations.

    1. A space of time equal to one twenty fourth part of the natural day, or duration of the diurnal revolution of the earth. An hour answers to fifteen degrees of the equator. It consists of 60 minutes, each minute of 60 seconds, &c.

    2. Time; a particular time; as the hour of death.

    Jesus saith, woman,my hour is not yet come. John.2.

    3. The time marked or indicated by a chronometer, clock or watch; the particular time of the day. What is the hour? At what hour shall we meet? I will be with you at an early hour.

    Good hour, signifies early or seasonably.

    You have arrived at a good hour.

    To keep good hours, to be at home in good season; not to be abroad late, or at the usual hours of retiring to rest.Hours, in the plural, certain prayers in the Romish church, to be repeated at stated times of the day, as matins and vespers.


    to pass 


    P`ASS, v.i. Eng. pat, and as a noun, a pass, a defile, an ambling, pace; passen, to be fit, to suit; L. patior, whence passion, to suffer, and peto, competo, in the sense of fit; Gr. to walk or step, to suffer; The word pass coincides with L. passus, a step, and this is from pando, L. passus, a step, and this is from pando, to extend; n being casual, the original word was pado.

    1. To move, in almost any manner; to go; to proceed from one place to another. A man may pass on foot, on horseback or in a carriage; a bird and a meteor pass through the air; a ship passes on or through the water; light passes from the sun to the planets; it passes from the sun to the earth in about eight minutes.

    2. To move from one state to another; to alter or change, or to be changed in condition; as, to pass from health to sickness; to pass from just to unjust.

    3. To vanish; to disappear; to be lost. In this sense, we usually say, to pass away.

    Beauty is a charm, but soon the charm will pass.

    4. To be spent; to go on or away progressively.

    The time when the thing existed, is the idea of that space of duration which passed between some fixed period and the being of that thing.

    5. To die; to depart from life. Little used.

    6. To be in any state; to undergo; with under; as, to pass under the rod.

    7. To be enacted; to receive the sanction of a legislative house or body by a majority of votes.

    Neither of these bills has yet passed the house of commons.

    8. To be current; to gain reception or to be generally received. Bank bills pass as a substitute for coin.

    False eloquence passeth only where true is not understood.

    9. To be regarded; to be received in opinion or estimation.

    This will not pass for a fault in him, till it is proved to be one in us.

    10. To occur; to be present; to take place; as, to notice what passes in the mind.

    11. To be done.

    Provided no indirect act pass upon our prayers to defile them.

    12. To determine; to give judgment or sentence.

    Though well we may not pass upon his life.

    13. To thrust; to make a push in fencing or fighting.

    14. To omit; to suffer to go unheeded or neglected. We saw the act, but let it pass.

    15. To move through any duct or opening; as, substances in the stomach that will not pass, not be converted into ailment.

    16. To percolate; to be secreted; as juices that pass from the glands into the mouth.

    17. To be in a tolerable state.

    A middling sort of man was left well enough by his father to pass,but he could never think he had enough, so long as any had more.

    18. To be transferred from one owner to another. The land article passed by livery and seizin.

    19. To go beyond bounds. For this we generally use surpass.

    20. To run or extend; as a line or other thing. The north limit of Massachusetts passes three miles north of the Merrimac.

    To come to pass, to happen; to arrive; to come; to be; to exist; a phrase much used in the Scriptures.

    To pass away, to move from sight; to vanish.

    1. To be spent; to be lost.

    A good part of their lives passes away without thinking.

    To pass by, to move near and beyond. He passed by as we stood in the road.

    To pass on, to proceed.

    To pass over, to go or move from side to side; to cross; as, to pass over to the other side.

    To pass into, to unite and blend, as two substances or colors, in such a manner that it is impossible to tell where one ends and the other begins.

    P`ASS, v.t. To go beyond. The sun has passed the age of frivolousness.

    1. To go through or over; as, to pass a river.

    2. To spend; to live through; as, to pass time; to pass the night in revelry, and the day in sleep.

    3. To cause to move; to send; as, to pass the bottle from one guest to another; to pass a pauper from one town to another; to pass a rope round a yard; to pass the blood from the right to the left ventricle of the heart.

    4. To cause to move hastily.

    I had only time to pass my eye over the medals, which are in great number.

    5. To transfer from one owner to another; to sell or assign; as, to pass land from A to B by deed; to pass a note or bill.

    6. To strain; to cause to percolate; as, to pass wine through a filter.

    7. To utter; to pronounce; as, to pass compliments; to pass sentence or judgment; to pass censure on another's works.

    8. To procure or cause to go.

    Waller passed over five thousand horse and foot by Newbridge.

    9. To put an end to.

    This night

    We'll pass the business privately and well.

    10. To omit; to neglect either to do or to mention.

    I pass their warlike pomp, their proud array.

    11. To transcend; to transgress or go beyond; as, to pass the bounds of moderation.

    12. To admit; to allow; to approve and receive as valid or just; as, to pass an account at the war-office.

    13. To approve or sanction by a constitutional or legal majority of votes; as, the house of representatives passed the bill. Hence,

    14. To enact; to carry through all the forms necessary to give validity; as, the legislature passed the bill into a law.

    15. To impose fraudulently; as, she passed the child on her husband for a boy.

    16. To practice artfully; to cause to succeed; as, to pass a trick on one.

    17. To surpass; to excel; to exceed.

    18. To thrust; to make a push in fencing.

    To see thee fight, to see thee pass thy puncto.

    To pass away, to spend; to waste; as, to pass away the flower of like in idleness.

    To pass by, to pass near and beyond.

    1. To overlook; to excuse; to forgive; not to censure or punish; as, to pass by a crime or fault.

    2. To neglect; to disregard.

    Certain passages of Scripture we cannot pass by without injury to truth.

    To pass over, to move from side to side; to cross; as, to pass over a river or mountain.

    1. To omit; to overlook or disregard. He passed over one charge without a reply.

    P`ASS, n. A narrow passage, entrance or avenue; a narrow or difficult place of entrance and exit; as a pass between mountains.

    1. A passage; a road.

    2. Permission to pass, to go or to come; a license to pass; a passport.

    A gentleman had a pass to go beyond the seas.

    A ship sailing under the flag and pass of an enemy.

    3. An order for sending vagrants or impotent persons to their place of abode.

    4. In fencing and fighting, a thrust; a push; attempt to stab or strike; as , to make a pass at an antagonist.

    5. State; condition or extreme case; extremity.

    To what a pass are our minds brought.

    Matters have been brought to this pass--


    from the upper situated above another part


    to the lower  "the lower levels of the building"

    bulb.


    1. 
    a rounded underground storage organ present in some plants, notably those of the lily family, consisting of a short stem surrounded by fleshy scale leaves or leaf bases, lying dormant over winter.
    and put it on the table upsettingly as the sand starting pouring

    instrument 

    IN'STRUMENT, n. L. instrumentum, from instruo, to prepare; that which is prepared.

    1. A tool; that by which work is performed or any thing is effected; as a knife, a hammer, a saw, a plow, &c. Swords, muskets and cannon are instruments of destruction. A telescope is an astronomical instrument.

    2. That which is subservient to the execution of a plan or purpose, or to the production of any effect; means used or contributing to an effect; applicable to persons or things. Bad men are often instruments of ruin to others. The distribution of the Scriptures may be the instrument of a vastly extensive reformation in morals and religion.

    3. An artificial machine or body constructed for yielding harmonious sounds; as an organ, a harpsichord, a violin, or flute, &c., which are called musical instruments, or instruments of music.

    4. In law, a writing containing the terms of a contract, as a deed of conveyance, a grant, a patent, an indenture, &c.; in general, a writing by which some fact is recorded for evidence, or some right conveyed.

    5. A person who acts for another, or is employed by another for a special purpose, and if the purpose is dishonorable, the term implies degradati

    for measuring MEASURABLE, a. mezh'urable. See Measure.

    1. That may be measured; susceptible of mensuration or computation.

    2. Moderate; in small quantity or extent. MEASURING, ppr. mezh'uring. Computing or ascertaining length, dimensions, capacity or amount.

    1. a. A measuring cast, a throw or cast that requires to be measured, or not to be distinguished from another but by measuring.




    time 


    TIME, n. L.tempus; tempora, the falls of the head, also tempest, &c. See Tempest. Time is primarily equivalent to season; to the Gr.wpa in its original sense, opportunity, occasion, a fall, an event, that which comes.

    1. A particular portion or part of duration, whether past, present or future. The time was; the time has been; the time is; the time will be.

    Lost time is never found again.

    God, who at sundry times, and in divers manners, spoke in time past to the fathers by the prophets. Heb.1.

    2. A proper time; a season.

    There is a time to every purpose. Eccles.3.

    The time of figs was not yet. Mark 11.

    3. Duration.

    The equal and uniform flux of time does not affect our senses.

    Time is absolute or relative; absolute time is considered without any relation to bodies or their motions. Relative time is the sensible measure of any portion of duration, by means of motion. Thus the diurnal revolution of the sun measures a space of time or duration. Hence,

    4. A space or measured portion of duration.

    We were in Paris two months,and all that time enjoyed good health.

    5. Life or duration, in reference to occupation. One man spends his time in idleness; another devotes all his time to useful purposes.

    Believe me, your time is not your own; it belongs to God, to religion, to mankind.

    6. Age; a part of duration distinct from other parts; as ancient times; modern times. The Spanish armada was defeated in the time of Queen Elizabeth.

    7. Hour of travail.

    She was within one month of her time.

    8. Repetition; repeated performance, or mention with reference to repetition. The physician visits his patient three times in a day.

    9. Repetition; doubling; addition of a number to itself; as, to double cloth four times; four times four amount to sixteen.

    10. Measure of sounds in music; as common time, and treble time. In concerts,it is all important, that the performers keep time, or exact time.

    11. The state of things at a particular period; as when we say, good times, or bad times, hard times,dull times for trade, &c. In this sense, the plural is generally used.

    12. In grammar, tense.

    In time, in good season; sufficiently early.

    He arrived in time to see the exhibition.

    1. A considerable space of duration; process or continuation of duration. You must wait patiently; you will in time recover your health and strength.

    At times, at distinct intervals of duration. At times he reads; at other times, he rides.

    The spirit began to move him at times. Judges 13.

    Time enough, in season; early enough.

    Stanley at Bosworth-field, came time enough to save his life.

    To lose time, to delay.

    1. To go too slow; as, a watch or clock loses time.

    Apparent time, in astronomy, true solar time, regulated by the apparent motions of the sun.

    Mean time, equated time, a mean or average of apparent time.

    Siderial time, is that which is shown by the diurnal revolutions of the stars.

    TIME, v.t. To adapt to the time or occasion; to bring, begin or perform at the proper season or time; as, the measure is well timed, or ill timed. No small part of political wisdom consists in knowing how to time propositions and measures.

    Mercy is good, but kings mistake its timing.

    1. To regulate as to time; as, he timed the stroke.

    2. To measure; as in music or harmony.

    consisting 


    consistent

    CONSISTENT, a. L. See Consist.

    1. Fixed; firm; not fluid; as the consistent parts of a body, distinguished from the fluid.

    2. Standing together or in agreement; compatible; congruous; uniform; not contradictory or opposed; as, two opinions or schemes are consistent; let a man be consistent with himself; the law is consistent with justice and policy.




    of a glass 

    GL`ASS, n. L. glastum; glesid, blueness. Greenness is usually named from vegetation or growing, as L. viridis, from vireo.

    1. A hard, brittle, transparent, factitious substance, formed by fusing sand with fixed alkalies.

    In chimistry, a substance or mixture, earthy, saline or metallic, brought by fusion to the state of a hard, brittle, transparent mass, whose fracture is conchoidal.

    2. A glass vessel of any kind; as a drinking glass.

    3. A mirror; a looking-glass.

    4. A vessel to be filled with sand for measuring time; as an hour-glass.

    5. The destined time of man's life. His glass is run.

    6. The quantity of liquor that a glass vessel contains. Drink a glass of wine with me.

    7. A vessel that shows the weight of the air.

    8. A perspective glass; as an optic glass.

    9. The time which a glass runs, or in which it is exhausted of sand. The seamen's watch-glass is half an hour. We say, a ship fought three glasses.

    10. Glasses, in the plural, spectacles.

    GL`ASS, a. Made of glass; vitreous; as a glass bottle.

    GL`ASS, v.t. To see as in a glass. Not used.

    1. To case in glass. Little used.

    2. To cover with glass; to glaze.

    In the latter sense, glaze is generally used.

    vessel 


    vessel

    VES'SEL, n. L. vas, vasis. This word is probably the English vat.

    1. A cask or utensil proper for holding liquors and other things, as a tun, a pipe, a puncheon, a hogshead, a barrel, a firkin, a bottle, a kettle, a cup, a dish, &c.

    2. In anatomy, any tube or canal, in which the blood and other humors are contained, secreted or circulated, as the arteries, veins, lymphatics, spermatics, &c.

    3. In the physiology of plants, a canal or tube of very small bore, in which the sap is contained and conveyed; also, a bag or utricle, filled with pulp, and serving as a reservoir for sap; also, a spiral canal, usually of a larger bore, for receiving and distributing air.

    4. Any building used in navigation, which carries masts and sails, from the largest ship of war down to a fishing sloop. In general however, vessel is used for the smaller ships, brigs, sloops, schooners, luggers, scows, &c.

    5. Something containing.

    Vessels of wrath, in Scripture, are such persons as are to receive the full effects of God's wrath and indignation, as a punishment for their sins.

    Vessels of mercy, are persons who are to receive the effects of God's mercy, or future happiness and glory.

    Chosen vessels, ministers of the gospel, as appointed to bear the glad news of salvation to others; called also earthen vessels, on account of their weakness and frailty.

    VES'SEL, v.t. To put into a vessel. Not in use.


    vessel

    VES'SEL, n. L. vas, vasis. This word is probably the English vat.

    1. A cask or utensil proper for holding liquors and other things, as a tun, a pipe, a puncheon, a hogshead, a barrel, a firkin, a bottle, a kettle, a cup, a dish, &c.

    2. In anatomy, any tube or canal, in which the blood and other humors are contained, secreted or circulated, as the arteries, veins, lymphatics, spermatics, &c.

    3. In the physiology of plants, a canal or tube of very small bore, in which the sap is contained and conveyed; also, a bag or utricle, filled with pulp, and serving as a reservoir for sap; also, a spiral canal, usually of a larger bore, for receiving and distributing air.

    4. Any building used in navigation, which carries masts and sails, from the largest ship of war down to a fishing sloop. In general however, vessel is used for the smaller ships, brigs, sloops, schooners, luggers, scows, &c.

    5. Something containing.

    Vessels of wrath, in Scripture, are such persons as are to receive the full effects of God's wrath and indignation, as a punishment for their sins.

    Vessels of mercy, are persons who are to receive the effects of God's mercy, or future happiness and glory.

    Chosen vessels, ministers of the gospel, as appointed to bear the glad news of salvation to others; called also earthen vessels, on account of their weakness and frailty.

    VES'SEL, v.t. To put into a vessel. Not in use.

    Having


    having

    HAV'ING, ppr. from have. Possessing; holding in power or possession; containing; gaining; receiving; taking.


    two compartments 



    from the upper of which a quantity of usually sand runs in an hour into the lower one.

    The hourglass, sometimes with the addition of metaphorical wings, is often depicted as a symbol that human existence is fleeting, and that the "sands of time" will run out for every human life. ... The hourglass was also used in alchemy as a symbol for hour.


    To dream of an hourglass represents a situation that revolves around waiting. You or someone else that is waiting a long time for something to end. Waiting for every single little thing to finish.

    Alternatively, an hourglass may represent your feeling that time is running out. A deadline you have to meet or a sense of urgency. You or someone that may not have enough time.


    an instrument for measuring time, consisting of two bulbs of glassjoined by a narrow passage through which a quantity of sand or mercury runs in just an hour.a device consisting of two transparent chambers linked by a narrow channel, containing a quantity of sand that takes a specified time to trickle to one chamber from the other(modifier) well-proportioned with a small waistan hourglass figure