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Category Archives: Entry
Entry no. 1682837495
Original post on lifejournal.work: January 16, 2022 @ 11:56 PM
Title: Site created
04262023 @ 18:48:33
Site Created
Wrote on 7:03 am on April 27, 2023
Log #1682603564
Why do I do the things that I do. Are the things that I do good or bad? How do I know if the things for which I do are good or bad? How can I determine if the things that I do are good or bad?
My Mamang (Mum/Mom) told me, you will know if you are doing something that is good, when you feel good about what you are doing. When you are doing something bad, you will not only from the bad feeling you feel in what you are doing, or about to do, but your thinking will also be in chaos in trying to rationalize why you are doing something bad.
Not complicated, true or false, on or off! The only thing that is complicated is why I will do something bad, even though I know that is bad, but I do the thing anyway and I receive nothing but pain and misery from the action taken. 🙁
Entry no. 1682835480
au·to·di·dact
noun: autodidact
plural noun: autodidacts
noun: auto-didact
plural noun: auto-didacts
a self-taught person.
Origin
mid 16th century (as autodidacton ): via Latin from Greek autodidaktos ‘self-taught’, from autos ‘self’ + didaskein ‘teach’.
Entry no. 1682834496
i·dle
adjective: idle
comparative adjective: idler
superlative adjective: idlest
- (of a person) avoiding work; lazy.
- (of a person) not working; unemployed.
- (especially of a machine or factory) not active or in use.
- (of time) characterized by inaction or absence of significant activity.
- (of money) held in cash or in accounts paying no interest.
- without purpose or effect; pointless.
- (especially of a threat or boast) without foundation.
verb: idle
3rd person present: idles
past tense: idled
past participle: idled
gerund or present participle: idling
- spend time doing nothing.
- move aimlessly or lazily.
- North American
take out of use or employment.
- (of an engine) run slowly while disconnected from a load or out of gear.
- cause (an engine) to idle.
Origin
Old English īdel ‘empty, useless’, of West Germanic origin; related to Dutch ijdel ‘vain, frivolous, useless’ and German eitel ‘bare, worthless’.
Entry no. 1682809600
ex·traor·di·nar·y
/ikˈstrôrd(ə)nˌerē,ˌekstrəˈôrdnˌerē/
noun: extraordinary
noun: extra-ordinary
plural noun: extraordinaries
plural noun: extra-ordinaries
adjective: extraordinary
adjective: extra-ordinary
very unusual or remarkable.
- unusually great.
- (of a meeting) specially convened.
- (of an official) additional; specially employed.
Origin

late Middle English: from Latin extraordinarius, from extra ordinem ‘outside the normal course of events’.
Entry no. 1682809404
sane
adjective: sane
comparative adjective: saner
superlative adjective: sanest
(of a person) of sound mind; not mad or mentally ill.
- (of an undertaking or manner) reasonable; sensible.
Origin
early 17th century: from Latin sanus ‘healthy’
Entry no. 1682809106
ap·pren·tice
noun: apprentice
plural noun: apprentices
a person who is learning a trade from a skilled employer, having agreed to work for a fixed period at low wages.
verb: apprentice; 3rd person present: apprentices; past tense: apprenticed; past participle: apprenticed; gerund or present participle: apprenticing
employ (someone) as an apprentice.
- North American
serve as an apprentice.
Origin
Middle English: from Old French aprentis (from apprendre ‘learn’, from Latin apprehendere ‘apprehend’), on the pattern of words ending in -tis, -tif, from Latin -tivus (see -ive).
Entry no. 1682808786
certified
adjective: certified
officially recognized as possessing certain qualifications or meeting certain standards.
cer·ti·fy
verb
past tense: certified
past participle: certified
attest or confirm in a formal statement.
- officially recognize (someone or something) as possessing certain qualifications or meeting certain standards.
- officially declare insane.
Origin
Middle English: from Old French certifier, from late Latin certificare, from Latin certus ‘certain’.
Entry no. 1682808639
in·vin·ci·ble
adjective: invincible
too powerful to be defeated or overcome.
Origin
late Middle English (earlier than vincible ): via Old French from Latin invincibilis, from in- ‘not’ + vincibilis (see vincible).
Entry no. 1682808352
cha·os
noun: chaos
plural noun: chaoses
complete disorder and confusion.
- Physics
behavior so unpredictable as to appear random, owing to great sensitivity to small changes in conditions. - the formless matter supposed to have existed before the creation of the universe.
- Greek Mythology
the first created being, from which came the primeval deities Gaia, Tartarus, Erebus, and Nyx.
noun: Chaos
Origin
late 15th century (denoting a gaping void or chasm, later formless primordial matter): via French and Latin from Greek khaos ‘vast chasm, void’.