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Old 01-26-2004, 09:15 AM  
C_U_Next_Tuesday
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Join Date: Oct 2002
Location: over the river and through the woods
Posts: 10,581
Quote:
Originally posted by spanno
yea lets all call eachothers C*UNTs till we change the meaning of it too
C.UNT
KUNA = meant both Mother Earth in BASQUE old Indo European language and YONI
hahahahaRY meaning Earth Goddess = country
As late as 1700 English peasantry still used this word hahahaha with respect. Often it would be associated with a river or a township by a river mouth (river CUNNIT, now the river Kennet; township in Roman times called CUNETIO
since 1740 this word C.UNT had been held to be obscene and was a legal offence to print it in full, thus the Partridge Dict of Slang (1726) writes the word C*NT (Silbury treasure 110)
VULVA is the accepted replacement for C.UNT
KALI is one of the titles of the great Devi of ancient India, the goddess was called KUNTI yoni of the UNIVERSE
Many words and concepts come from this ancient word
CUNINA the Roman Goddess who guards children in the cradle
CUNABULA cradle, earliest abode, the place where everythig is nurtured in its beginnings
CUNICLE a passageway (underground); a hole
CUNNE; to enquire into, to explore, to have experience of, to prove, to test, to taste
CUNNING; to know, possessing a practical skill, able, skilful, clever, possessing a magical knowledge
1874 "I threatened to prosecute the village CUNNING WOMAN whose herbal knowledge and other wisdom continued to be held in high esteem by the villagers" (Silbury 112)
KUNTA (Norse) gave rise to the family of words such as KIN OF THE KUNT
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