(9apw of 11)
English “hang” means a tie, to stick to.
This is similar to Egyptian “hank” thus “ankh” which means a tie, a noose, to clasp. (BB 60, pdf 72)
English “stake” means to shut up, fasten
Using the same letters as in “stake,”this returns us to Egyptian “steka: which means hide, lie hid, inside. (BB 75, pdf 87)
The English phrase “stick it in” is similar to Egyptian “stekh” which means make not to see, hide, (BB 75, pdf 87)
“Stekh” signifies to embalm, hide, to escape notice, lie hidden, make
invisible. (BB 418, pdf 430)
Combining the above three sets of meanings we can understand “stigma” to be a form of Stekh + ma. This represents duality of mother and child as Astarte and Sutekh also together known as Sut-Typhon (BB 13, pdf 25)
So whereas Egyptian stekhma represents duality and balance, English stigma does not. Stekhma is to attach a balanced understanding while stigma is to attach an unbalanced understanding, thus make what is partially true, largely false. Stekhma attaches balance to one's spirit while stigma attempts, and often succeeds, in attaching imbalance to someone's spirit, their ankh, their thanks, their tanks (self view, worldview and universal view)
Egyptian stekhma understands that one truth is revealed and one is hidden but both are present; however English stigma promotes the notion that the stated understanding is complete even though it is one-sided, thus fragmented.
We earlier learned that “t” “s” “ts” “st” “dj” and other forms are tied and often interchangeable depending on the given set of conditions. As words go through these permutation transformations, they can either gain or lose meaning or remain the same.
Stekh is related to Tekha. Kha is the fish and Te means to remain. Tekha would be the fish that remained fixed, attached to the shore. This is the oyster. The oyster is bivalve, thus a form of duality and a symbol of the ankh. The oyster was used as a form of Osiris, one who divides in two to form the basis for continuous repetition and renewal. This is the same as cellular division. This is the ever-coming one, the Christ.
Tekha is also Teka and Tesa, meaning to touch, attach, join together.
Included in Stekha is Tekh and Tekhi, forms of Taht, the teacher, illuminator, revealer, shower. Thus included in that which is hidden, is the ability to reveal itself, and the other way around.
Other forms are Tek, Tesh and Tes.Tek is also formed by (T + Ka). Teka means to cut, join, touch, attach, adhere, mix, multiply, cross, twist, intertwine.
Investigate
Stekha leads to stiga which is part of the word investigate. This indicates that investigate means to look into that which is hidden, to gain insight in that which is hidden and unknown by joining pieces of the puzzle.Further investigation reveals “fekh” as a form of stekh. Stigmas fekh people up by inserting faulty logic into a person's memory database.