Anonymous ID: d76120 Dec. 6, 2020, 12:07 p.m. No.11926472   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>6563 >>6642 >>6741 >>6826

Q 3313

https://qanon.pub/index2.html#3313

 

1st & 10 on the 40.

 

California Trump Supporters Take Over Huntington Beach Pier to Protest Curfew

https://www.thegatewaypundit.com/2020/12/happening-now-california-trump-supporters-take-huntington-beach-pier-protest-curfew-videos/

 

California is currently under a statewide mandatory 10 p.m. curfew.

 

Look for CA-1 and for MAIN ST, both of which are 1st routes.

 

Look for 10 as in 10PM curfew.

 

Search for on the 40.

 

Note the use of the ampersand rather than 'and'. Ampersand. SAND. AMPER.

 

AM PER SAND

 

History of the Ampersand

https://www.merriam-webster.com/words-at-play/the-history-of-ampersand

 

The English alphabet didn't always go from A to Z. If you'd been learning your ABC's in the 19th century it's very likely that your alphabet would have had a 27th member: &.

 

That very first ampersand was a ligature—that is, a character consisting of two or more letters joined together. Its creator was joining the letters e and t, of the Latin word et, meaning "and."

 

Starting in the late Middle Ages, single letters that also functioned as words—think I and A—were referred to as letters with the aid of the phrase per se, to clarify that it was the letter being referred to, and not the word. The letter I, for example, would be referred to with the phrase I per se, I, which means in Latin "I by itself (is the word) I." When the 27th quasi-letter & was referred to it was called & per se, and, meaning "& by itself (is the word) and." That read as "and per se and."

 

"And per se, and" eventually evolved into ampersand, the word we know and love today. & the rest is history.

 

Huntington Beach Pier

https://www.surfcityusa.com/things-to-do/attractions/huntington-beach-pier/