Anonymous ID: 50cd39 Jan. 8, 2021, 3:06 a.m. No.12396217   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>6258

Linn be like,

Hi, ALL.

 

if their domestic, does he call them [D]ALL?

 

[F]ALL for [F]?

 

are they the Great [F]ALL?

 

ion rains and electchain cascades?

 

ummm, paging ms. chambers.

#GASEN

 

jus T sayin…..

Anonymous ID: 50cd39 Jan. 8, 2021, 3:18 a.m. No.12396313   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>6324 >>6331 >>6379

>>12396258

been trying to figure out to whom this broad prays.

they talk about papa and energy. nuckin futz

 

 

Ποπάνων (Popanon, Libo?)

 

The epithet Ποπάνων (Popanōn) is attested only by Lydus,[114] who cites Varro as stating that on the day of the kalendae he was offered a cake which earned him this title. There is no surviving evidence of this name in Latin, although the rite is attested by Ovid for the kalendae of January[115] and by Paul.[116] This cake was named ianual but the related epithet of Janus could not plausibly have been Ianualis: it has been suggested Libo[117] which remains purely hypothetical. The context could allow an Etruscan etymology.

Iunonius

 

Janus owes the epithet Iunonius to his function as patron of all kalends, which are also associated with Juno. In Macrobius's explanation: "Iunonium, as it were, not only does he hold the entry to January, but to all the months: indeed all the kalends are under the jurisdiction of Juno". At the time when the rising of the new moon was observed by the pontifex minor the rex sacrorum assisted by him offered a sacrifice to Janus in the Curia Calabra while the regina sacrorum sacrificed to Juno in the regia.[118]

 

[P]opanon. Is that like [Q]Anon?