View Full Version : Know what Covid-19 really means? (Mod edit: not really!)
Maia Gabrial
7th August 2020, 15:56
On an interview with Laura Eisenhower, retired FBI agent, John DeSouza revealed what Covid19 actually meant. It's a message to the cabal:
C -- See with your eyes
OVID -- Latin for Sheep
19 -- an ancient number for surrender
So, next time you slip on the mask, it's not for protection from anything. It's you showing the cabal your surrender...
Now isn't that something? :facemask: :facemask: :facemask:
Satori
7th August 2020, 16:11
On an interview with Laura Eisenhower, retired FBI agent, John DeSouza revealed what Covid19 actually meant. It's a message to the cabal:
C -- See with your eyes
OVID -- Latin for Sheep
19 -- an ancient number for surrender
So, next time you slip on the mask, it's not for protection from anything. It's you showing the cabal your surrender...
Now isn't that something? :facemask: :facemask: :facemask:
I believe the word is Ovis, not Ovid. It is a genus of mammals known as sheep. Latin for sheep is ovium or shep.
EFO
7th August 2020, 17:05
C--ertificate
O--f
V--accination
and
ID--entification
from
1 to 9
?
:)
ExomatrixTV
7th August 2020, 20:53
“OVID”
The word for “sheep” in Latin in is “ovis”, not “ovid” ( here (https://latin-dictionary.net/definition/29031/ovis-ovis) ). In the English-speaking world, Ovid often refers to Publius Ovidius Naso, a Roman poet who lived in the 1st century BCE ( here (https://www.britannica.com/biography/Ovid-Roman-poet) ).
It is possible that the name Ovidius is derived from the Latin word ovis ( en.wiktionary.org/wiki/Ovidius (https://en.wiktionary.org/wiki/Ovidius) ).
“C”
The stand-alone letter “C” does not refer to the verb “to see” in an “ancient language”, which one original poster clarifies as “Latin and Roman (sic)” in a comment ( here (https://www.facebook.com/openyoureyes.pro/photos/a.998577060327911/1383036431881970/?type=3&theater) ).
“Cf” is an abbreviation for the Latin word confer, often used in endnotes or footnotes to point the reader to works that offer an argument which contradicts or is otherwise different from the author’s argument, according to the Writing Center at the University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill ( here (https://writingcenter.unc.edu/tips-and-tools/latin-terms-and-abbreviations/) ). It is unclear what exactly is meant by the post.
NUMBER 19
According to the Encyclopedia Britannica’s entry on number symbology, the number 19 was considered unlucky for ancient Babylonians, while in Islamic numerology, the number could be considered “an important name for God” ( here (https://www.britannica.com/topic/number-symbolism/13#ref248176) ).
No search results that point to the number’s significance cite historical evidence to demonstrate that it was indeed considered the “number of surrender” by any ancient civilization ( here (https://www.spiritualunite.com/articles/number-19-meaning/) ).
19 is used as a mystical number by Stephen King, making appearances in multiple books in his Dark Tower series ( stephenking.fandom.com/wiki/19 (https://stephenking.fandom.com/wiki/19) ).
araucaria
8th August 2020, 19:38
I think 19 refers to the year of discovery, as for comets. Co(rona)Vi(rus), I don't know what the D stands for.
Each time slip on the mask, it is simply to protect others - or reassure them, since I am OK.
Keep it simple maybe?
Bill Ryan
8th August 2020, 19:57
I think 19 refers to the year of discovery, as for comets. Co(rona)Vi(rus), I don't know what the D stands for.
Each time slip on the mask, it is simply to protect others - or reassure them, since I am OK.
Keep it simple maybe?It's
Corona
Virus
Disease
2019
(Terrible name! Blame the WHO. :) )
araucaria
9th August 2020, 09:02
I have already warned against this kind of popular etymology; see these posts:
http://projectavalon.net/forum4/showthread.php?75998-Persian-Woman-Talks-about-THE-MATRIX-women4truth&p=889272&viewfull=1#post889272
http://projectavalon.net/forum4/showthread.php?85752-Helen-They-ve-been-around-for-thousands-of-years&p=1006734&viewfull=1#post1006734
Talking of things ovidian, an oviduct is a passage for eggs (ova). Popular etymology is an extremely productive area for wandering thoughts, which may sometimes go viral. Note however that eggs are also used in producing vaccines. Talking of vaccines, the word comes from the Latin for cowpox, vaccinia (vacca = cow), a mild disease in cows used to inoculate against smallpox. My point being that language is hugely metaphorical; from being extremely down-to-earth with reference to sheep and cows, you can take it all the way up to cosmic politics if you like, but you need to beware of just playing on words.
Powered by vBulletin™ Version 4.1.1 Copyright © 2026 vBulletin Solutions, Inc. All rights reserved.