(December 8, 2013 at 5:18 pm)StrongWaters Wrote:(December 8, 2013 at 5:04 pm)Duck Wrote: Why? How do we interpret this meaning? Where is the instruction manual telling us what this means? How do you know this? What evidence is there?
Ears are wheatheads in Hebrew, but they are also the ears you hear with. On the branch of the root word Speak, or speaker, we get the word Ear. When a grain of wheat is planted in soil, water opens the seed. Ears open in good soil when water is added. The soil, water and sunlight are all keys to expressing the information with meaning. Fruit is then harvested.
Your soil needs to be managed. A gardener must suffer the hoe.
You have not in any way answered any of the questions I asked. Not one. You wandered off down a tangent about the origin of some words and then draw an extremely suspect analogy about something to do with a gardener using a hoe on my soil. I don't have any soil.