Anonymous ID: 9c1838 April 21, 2021, 1:01 a.m. No.13477381   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>13477376

Constitutions are based off that one book and a corner stone of Common Law. KJV only, it is boring because it is the claim from the very beginning of it all that you have a right to be here and a trust with every one as beneficiaries of all the material wealth on this planet. It's literally the claim to the Throne and Royal Law.

Anonymous ID: 9c1838 April 21, 2021, 2:05 a.m. No.13477513   🗄️.is 🔗kun

lord(n.)

 

mid-13c., laverd, loverd, from Old English hlaford "master of a household, ruler, feudal lord, superior; husband," also "God," translating Latin dominus, Greek kyrios in the New Testament, Hebrew yahweh in the Old (though Old English dryhten was more frequent). Old English hlaford is a contraction of earlier hlafweard,literally"one who guards the loaves," from hlaf "bread, loaf" (see loaf (n.)) + weard "keeper, guardian" (from PIE root *wer- (3) "perceive, watch out for").

 

Compare lady (literally "bread-kneader"), and Old English hlafæta "household servant," literally "loaf-eater." For the contraction, compare Harold. The modern monosyllabic form emerged 14c. Meaning "an owner of land, houses, etc.," is from c. 1300; the sense in landlord. As the "usual polite or respectful form of address to a nobleman under the rank of a duke, and to a bishop" [OED] from 1540s. As an interjection from late 14c. Lords "peers of England," especially as represented in parliaments, is from mid-15c.

 

kek.