1.41 is the square root of 2
The etymology of the word shows that it is in some way from an oriental tribe.
A "kajin" is literally a fire god and this comes from Japanese.
The gematria of 160, the Tree of Knowledge of Good and Evil
Who is Abel? The answer is in Genesis 4:2. The Hebrew word for Abel is Hebel (pronounced heh'bel). The gematria value given is 37
Bel in hebrew means lord.
Hebel also is defined as vapor or breath. "Heh" is a sound you make when you take a breath. It also is connected to the sound of wind. It also could even mean "air" itself, an invisible object with the force of wind. Fire (Cain) consumes (kills) air (Abel).
The Japanese god of wind is Fūjin. Fū means wind and could be the derivation of the last part of the word Khufu.
Egyptian word netjer (god) represented by a banner in wind.
"Picture Book of a Hundred Stories" (a book about strange stories written in the Edo period) says the wind god is a noxious vapor. It floats here and there riding the wind, and gets into the opening of something, or into the gap between the warm and cold air. The wind god blows yellow-colored breath on human when he met, and if exposed to the breath, the human becomes ill. And the book also says that the breath's yellow-colored element is the humid soil. This soil is the yellow sand flown from the loess zone in China, and the yellow sand is said to have been the sign of rainy weather and an outbreak of plague from the wind. All over western Japan, meeting a sudden illness or fever outdoors is described as 'suffering from the wind,' and there exists the folklore that the wind is not a natural phenomenon but a spiritual one.
"Book of Folded Pages" (a book on the study of waka poems written in the Heian period) and "A Miscellany of Ten Maxims" (a collection of anecdotes written in the Kamakura period) both say people held rituals for soothing fujin that was believed to be the troublesome god for bringing disasters and illnesses. Tatsuta-taisha Shrine in Nara Prefecture holds the fujin festival every July 4.
A look back at who made the pyramids: Khufu/Cheops
Notice what appears to be a sea turtle on top of the headdress. This appears to be a man of asian descent.
This shows that "Khu" comes from the heron. The spirit of fire/light and wind seems to be an important part of this word.
I thought this was interesting that the word is somehow connected to "hill". The sound CHIU (CHEO) also sounds like the beginning of the English spelling "Cheops". If it is "Ku", then it relates to the sound of birds in Japanese. Notice how the first character resembles a WAS scepter, which represents a heron. As I've described before, the Chinese word "Lu" (for heron) also means "way" or "path".
My suspicion is that the origin of the word is really asian or even Japanese.
I found this out about the Japanese god KUEBIKO, which seems to have similar attributes as the Egyptian god Osiris and/or Thoth.
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