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Permutations of the Trigrammaton YHW

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The Sefer Yetzirah "Book of Creation" describes how the universe was created by the "God of Israel" by the Ten Numbers and the Twenty-Two Letters of the Hebrew alphabet.

Y-H-W
Judah Halevi wrote in his book The Kuzari (1140), that the letters of the Tetragram are used as vowels for any other words (furthermore Judah Halevi in The Kurazi IV:3 related that Y is used for I, W for O, and H for A). In the first century, Flavius Josephus, a Jewish writer, had written that the Tetragram is written with four vowels (and not four consonants)1. Qumrn's writings showed that in the first century Y as vowel served only to indicate sounds I and E, W served only for sounds and U, and a H final served for the sound A. Furthermore, the H was use as vowel only at the end of words, and never inside of it (but between two vowels the H is heard as a slight E). So, to read the name YHWH as four vowels, it is to read IHA that is IEA2.

I-A-U
The two sounds "e" and "o" are not archaic, because the original vowels in Hebrew, as in the other Semitic tongues are only a, i, u, that is to say e and o always arise from an obscuring or contraction of these three pure sounds (A.E. Cowley - Gesenius' Hebrew Grammar,1988 Oxford Clarendon Press p. 35)3. The vowel symbolism seems to have been restricted to the three letters of the Tetragrammaton Yodh (), He (), Waw (). According to the Mothers of Reading the generated variants however may be varied in many ways: 1st letter: , or 2nd and 4th letter: or E4 3rd letter: or

The results may be ranging from: , , E, E, , , E, E, , , E, E and even (with a consonant J at the 1st position): J, J, JE, JE (with a consonant H at the 2nd position): H, H, H, H, H,H (with a consonant V/W at the 3rd position): V, W, EV, EW, V, W, EV, EW, V, W, EV, EW JAU is the ego-pronoun in Rumantsch, Grischun, JEU is the ego-pronoun in Sursilvan, JOU is the ego-pronoun in Sutsilvan, EAU is the ego-pronoun in Puter and also other abbreviated variants may be found in these categories of vowel combinations: (Surmiran) IA and (Vallader) EU. Even the southern German ego-pronoun IH may be represented in H and H more or less represents EGO itself. If we skip all words without a leading I or J this list is to be reduced to the following 12 letter permutations: , , E, E, H, H, J, J, JE, JE, JH, JH.
1 2 3 4 THE NAME OF GOD YeHoWaH. ITS STORY, by Grard Gertoux THE NAME OF GOD YeHoWaH. ITS STORY, by Grard Gertoux THE NAME OF GOD YeHoWaH. ITS STORY, by Grard Gertoux The letter E probably should be as long ( ) as all other vowels

Core

God (mostly from: Tetragrammaton Patristic writings) Ego-pronoun (Iao) - Diodorus Siculus (1st century BCE) (Iaoth) - Irenaeus (d. c. 202) - Clement of Alexandria (d. c. 215) (Iao) - Origen of Alexandria (d. c. 254) (Iao) - Theodoret (d. c. 457) Iao - Greece/Ionians, "Iao-ians," "Yah-o-ians" (Jehova) Dyaus Vedic/Indu JAHWE = IAUE JAHU = IAU IAUA - In the first century, one has the equivalence Y = I, W = U, and H = A at the end of words. (source: Name of God) YHWH -> IHA -> IEA (source: Qumrn's writings) IEOUA - Jehova (because the letter H is inaudible and the vowel U serves as a consonant V). IEOA, IHEHOUA (1455) - Nicholas of Cusa (Name of God) (Ieuo) - Porphyry (d. c. 305) according to Eusebius (died 339) Dieu (French & Provencal) Dievs - Vedic/Indu, Dyaus IEUE in Expositio in Apocalypsim (1195) Joachim of Flora "Adonay IEUE Tetragrammaton nomen" - Liber Figurarum IESUS had exactly the same vowels I, E and U as the divine name (~1200, pope Innocent III) (source: Name of God) i (Neapolitan) i (Welsh) I (English) Y (old English)

Tuesday/Thursday5 Diriaou (Breton ) Yaou (Breton)

jau (Rumantsch)

dydd Iau (Welsh) dijaus (Aranese)

eo (Sardianian) eo (Vulgar Latin)

jeu (Sursilvan) ieu (Occitan ) ieu (old Provenal) i, ie (Saxon) je (French) eu (Romanian) eu (Portuguese) eu (Galician) eu (Vallader)

jeudi (French) ziestac (Tuesday in Mid High German) jeudi (nouormand) jhedi (Poitevin)

HA YHWH -> IHA -> IEA (source: Qumrn's writings) IHAH (Genesis, Fabre d'Olivet) (source: Name of God) Ihah/ Ihah/ Jhah (1823) Antoine Fabre d'Olivet AE.. AIA EY IABE (Iabe) - Epiphanius (died 404) JABE or (both pronounced at that time /ja'v/) JB (Samaritans) - Theodoret (d. c. 457) JEB (Aia) (Jewish) - Theodoret (d. c. 457) eau ( Puter) , , (Greek) i, eij, eg, iag, ik (Gothic)6 dej (Franco-Provenal | arpitan) gjbia (Lombard) gibia (Piedmontese) zioba (Venetian) gibia (Sardinian) jbia (Val de Badia) jebia (Valle di Fassa) ia (Surmiran) (Norwegian dialect - Trndelag)

IAH

Iaho - (Pseudo-)Jerome (4th/5th century) IAH (Egyptian) - God yah moon god IHEVHE (1509) - Jacques Lefvres d'Etaples

IHE..

5 Source: Names of the days of the week 6 Notes to Etymons of English Words (1826)

IOA Now, one notices that all the theophoric names beginning io (Italian) IOOA in YHW-() in the Hebrew Bible were vocalized I-(a) (or IOOA) in the Septuagint and ever in Ia-. (Name of God) IOU JOU IOUA (1555) - Sbastien Chateillon (Name of God) Iouis (Jupiter) - (source: Name of God) Ioue (Jupiter)IouaIehoua (16th Cent.) (Name of God) iou (Aromanian)

ziostag (Tuesday in Old High German) hmra Dis (Ancient Greek) dijous (Catalan) dijus (Occitan) dies Iouis/Jovis ptiou Coptic 1 (Sahidic) pitiou Coptic 2 (Bohairic) jueves (Spanish) djueves (Ladino) djudi (Walloon) juebia (Ladin, Gardena)

IU JUE

Jupiter

Ju (Dalmatian) iu (Sicilian)

JEH

Jehjeh - James of Edessa (died 708) Iehoua Pietro Galatino (1500-1600) gievgia (Romansh) jo (Catalan) jo (Friulian) joi (Romanian) joi (Moldovan) joibe (Friulian) gioia (Aromanian) dies Jovis (Latin) joves (Old Portuguese) Gioved (Jovedi) (Italian) ghjovi (Corsican) giover (Neapolitan) jovi; jovida (Sicilian) jdzej (Venedic) yo (Aragonese) yo (Spanish) Dy' Yow (Cornish)

JEVE As Walker states7 that IEVE also might have been derived from I and Eve JOI

JOV

Jove (archaic Roman name for the sky god Jupiter) Jovis Sanskrit Djovis, "sky god Giove (Italian: from the sky god Jove - Jupiter)

YOH

YOHOUA (1278) - Raymond Martini (Name of God) YOHOUAH (1303) - Porchetus de Salvaticis

YOW Yow Jove/Jupiter (Cornish)

Analysis
If we skip all divine names without a leading I or J the list is to be reduced to the following 6 letter permutations: , , E, E, H, H, in which only IHU has not been found in the relevant lists of names. Obviously (except for ) the first letter was not allowed to be permutated to or . The IOA-permutation seems te be an uncommon exception (used in the Septuagint).8 Additionally found is IOU, IU, JOV, YOH, YOW (for the Latinazed Jupiter-Jove region) and JEH (in which the H-letter probably escaped the permutations). The permutation of the second letter to O had been used in the Latinazed Jupiter-Jove region and has not been following the Hebrew Mothers of Reading.

7 Who are the Anunnaki? 8 Permutations of the Trigrammaton YHW

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