This Explains It
(media.greatawakening.win)
Comments (32)
sorted by:
Someone needs to post this on TRUTH Social and X and others. Make it go viral.
I will on truth
Thank you.
Perfect! He is a schumer! What a lousy last name to have! I remember a story about a car sold in Japan that translated to Lemon and sales were poor.
Also the Chevy Nova. Spanish: no go
yep, it's a spell & why Q asked 'what is a spell'
Also, remember General Flynn said the Elizabeth Clare Prophet prayer at the rally in Council Bluffs (important golden hills & soil;)
ECP was raised a Christian Scientist, and she believed in the POWER of WORDS to the extreme. she has many decrees & invocations, I recommend her lectures, they always make me think. would also love to find out more how this 'word science' works if anyone has links, etc 🥸
Audi with E-tron French word for “formed turd”
That makes sense and should be added to the Volkswagens too.
Hyundai Pony is another
"pony" is Cockney rhyming slang for "crap" from "pony and trap"
Oops!
Omg I love ponies! They are pretty crafty though. I guess we need to believe them when they tell us!
The smaller they are, the more trouble. kek
What car was that? The only word I know of in Japanese that mean lemon is just loaned from English as レモン
and right under it Schumm : 2 Jewish (ASHKENAZIC) variant of Schum
So calling him "Scumbag" is actually quite accurate, then.
be interesting to see if more of their names are like this, as Fauci means 'sickle'😱
So I guess 'fettes schweine Schumer' would translate as Amy?
I think the voters should "Chuck" Schumer.
Most excellent find! KEK!
kek
now do Soros
Use the Schwartz-
In Greek/Hebrew it says it means— Thayer's Greek Lexicon: ́ soros. 1) an urn or receptacle for keeping the bones of the dead. 2) the funeral couch or bier on which the Jews carried their dead
Nailed it!!
It seems to have been a nickname, but an appropriate last name for the Commie in the Senate.😄
vagabond (adj.) early 15c. (earlier vacabond, c. 1400), from Old French vagabond, vacabond "wandering, unsteady" (14c.), from Late Latin vagabundus "wandering, strolling about," from Latin vagari "wander" (from vagus "wandering, undecided;" see vague) + gerundive suffix -bundus.
also from early 15c. vagabond (n.)
c. 1400, earlier wagabund (in a criminal indictment from 1311); see vagabond (adj.). Despite the earliest use, in Middle English often merely "one who is without a settled home, a vagrant" but not necessarily in a bad sense. Notion of "idle, disreputable person" predominated from 17c.
also from c. 1400 Entries linking to vagabond vague (adj.) "uncertain as to specifics," 1540s, from French vague "empty, vacant; wild, uncultivated; wandering" (13c.), from Latin vagus "strolling, wandering, rambling," figuratively "vacillating, uncertain," perhaps from PIE *Huog-o- and cognate with Old Norse vakka "to stray, hover," Old High German wankon "to totter, stagger," Old High German winkan "to waver, stagger, wink," Old English wincian "to nod" [de Vaan]. Related: Vagueness.
I will never forget to translate his name for him.
I did thank you dogsoldier2
It has been poosted on X.
What book is this from? LOL
https://discover.23andme.com/last-name/Schumer
https://en.geneanet.org/surnames/SCHUMER
Thanks, it does fit him too a (T).
Or check the below
related to the DIETZ word: SCHUIMER. Zee Schuimer = piraat, vagabond, crimineel, vogelvrije.