Difference between revisions of "See peegee ought he ought"
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* '''ought he ought''': eighty-eight | * '''ought he ought''': eighty-eight | ||
** '''see peegee ought he ought''': see page (pg) 88? | ** '''see peegee ought he ought''': see page (pg) 88? | ||
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+ | * From Mark L. Troy: "This happens at 6.32: "well, see peegee ought he ought, platterplate." If we observe the aural value of the phrase, and follow the suggestion of "see pg eighty-eight" in Moret's Rois et Dieux d'Egypte (1911, reprinted soon after the opening of Tutankhamen's tomb and popular at that time), we will find a "platterplate", that is a plate of "dished" or fallen Osiris, roused by Isis. This plate, reproduced here as fig. II, is titled "The Wake of Osiris" ("Veillée funèbre d'Osiris-Ounnefer mort")." |
Revision as of 21:34, 24 January 2008
- C P G 0 E 0 ?
- P.G.: please God
- ought he ought: eighty-eight
- see peegee ought he ought: see page (pg) 88?
- From Mark L. Troy: "This happens at 6.32: "well, see peegee ought he ought, platterplate." If we observe the aural value of the phrase, and follow the suggestion of "see pg eighty-eight" in Moret's Rois et Dieux d'Egypte (1911, reprinted soon after the opening of Tutankhamen's tomb and popular at that time), we will find a "platterplate", that is a plate of "dished" or fallen Osiris, roused by Isis. This plate, reproduced here as fig. II, is titled "The Wake of Osiris" ("Veillée funèbre d'Osiris-Ounnefer mort")."