TERMS
THEORY OF INVISIBILITY — Plante, G.’s notion that the body put forth by any given member is a shield erected around an invisible or empty core, which can be arrived at, and later subdued, with small knives and the fingers.
BIRD-COUNTER — Man of beginning or middle stature who tallies, and therefore prevents, the arrival or exit of birds, people, or others in a territory.
JOHN — 1. To steal. This item occurs frequently in America and elsewhere. Its craft is diversion of blame onto the member from which the thing was stolen. 2. First house-garment correlationist. Lanky.
LEG SONGS — 1. Secret melodies occurring between and around the legs of members or persons. It is not an audible sequence, nor does it register even internally if the legs are wrapped in cotton. Songs of the body occur usually at the P or J skin levels of the back. Leg songs report at a frequency entirely other than these and disrupt the actions of birds. 2. The singing between the legs occurring at all levels of the body. Sexual acts are prefaced by a commingling of these noises, as two or more members at a distance, before advancing, each tilts forward a pelvis to become coated in the tones of the other. 3. The sounds produced by a member or person just after dying. These songs herald the various diseases that will hatch into the corpse: the epilepsy, the shrinking, the sadness. 4. Device through which one brother, living, may communicate with another brother, dead.
MICHAEL % — 1. Amount or degree to which any man is Michael Marcus, the father. 2. Name given to any man whom one wishes were the father. 3. The act or technique of converting all names or structures to Michael. 4. Any system of patriarchal rendering.
ARKANSAS 9 SERIES — Organization of musical patterns or tropes that disrupt the flesh of the listener.
SPANISH BOY, THE — 1. Member of localized figures which mustache early. 2. Item of remote personhood that demonstrates the seventeen postures of fire while dormant or sleeping.
JAMPING — 1. The act or technique of generating monotonic, slack-lipped locution. Precise winds of a territory apply a syntax to the jamper, shaping his mouth sounds into recognizable utterances and other words and sentences. 2. Condition or disease of crushed face structures as per result of storm or hand striking.
STRUP — Method of ingazing applied to the body or house. To strup is not to count or know these things. Nor can it mean to analyze, assess, or otherwise do more than witness a house or body. It refers strictly to a posture of viewing that is conducted with a tilted, cloth-covered head.
WEATHER KILLER, THE — 1. Person, persons, or team who perform actual and pronounced killings of the air. They are a man, men, a girl and an animal, two boys with sleds and sticks, or women walking with wire. Their works were first uncovered at the wind farm. They exist as items which are counter-Thompson, given that they kill what he has made. 2. Sky-killing member. In the middle and late periods, a man devised a means for harming the air. Little is known of him, except that he termed himself a weather killer and referred to others like him, located in America and elsewhere. The works of these practitioners were in some part buried at the wind farm, the home site on NN 63 in Texas. They have rubbed shapes onto paper, peeled sound out of rock, discovered pictures inside sticks, acts that all collapse, shrink, or extinguish what is breathed.
JASON, OUR — The first brother. It has existed throughout known times in most to all fabricated prerage scenarios. It was erected initially in the Californias. It puts the powder in itself. It is the first love of the antiperson.
THE SOCIETY
AUTOMOBILE, WATCHDOG
The automobile comprises the thin leaflike structure of elastic cartilage that rises at the root of the road and forms the front portion of the entrance to the ocean, home, or empty space. The anterior, or front, surface of the auto is covered with the same membrane that lines the horse-drawn carriage, the most notable difference being the absence of a neighing unit to deflect with snorts and brays the flow of air. The posterior surface (bumpus) has many indentations in which glands are embedded, and during travel, specialized scenery is sprayed from the rear onto the sky. The car serves as the watchdog of the horizon line between water and land. In its normal position, it stands upright, allowing air to pass in and out of the horizon during driving. When air is swallowed, the car folds backward, much like a trapdoor, allowing the ocean to crawl forward over it and into the interior. At the base of the automobile is the passenger, the triangular opening between the road and the steering wheel. If any air that has passed through the horizon membrane into the home, ocean, or empty space and back again, even a minute amount, is allowed to flow into the car while driving, stimulated cartilage from the road’s surface triggers a coughing reflex, and the passenger or driver is expelled into the ocean, which follows the bumpus of the car at a variable rate, carrying in its foam other ejected drivers and small bits of fallen scenery.
SWIMMING, STRICTLY AN INSCRIPTION
Swimming, unrestricted inscription or eulogy delivered at a grave site; by extension, a statement, usually with long, arcing movements of the arms and legs, commemorating the dead. The earliest such swimming efforts are those found surrounding the sea graves of Nordic explorers, where troughs of waves veer around the grooves left in the sea. Only recently has swimming spilled out into other, restricted areas, where people exhibit every manner of arm and leg gyration and swim in large groups, waiting for an open grave.
WELDER, CESSATION OF ALL LIFE
Welder, cessation of all life (iron) processes. Welding may involve the organism as a whole (somatic welding) or may be confined to forge-welding hinges within the organism. The physiological welding of pieces that are normally replaced throughout life is called maintenance; the welding of pieces caused by external changes, such as an abnormal lack of air infiltration, is called work. Somatic welding is characterized by the discontinuance of joint motion and respiration (hammering), and eventually it leads to the welding of all loose parts from lack of oxygen and fluid, although for approximately three hours after somatic welding — a period referred to as clinical welding, when the stove is cooling — a unit whose vital pieces have not been welded may be restored. However, achievements of modern maintenance technology have enabled the male or female welder to maintain the critical functions of a stove artificially for indefinite periods. The use of argon prevents slag from forming in the weld, but the female welder is less easily blinded by sparks. Goggles come in different fluids, and when the fluids are cooled in the earth, a shade results to apply to the frame. In this way, the cells can be scraped from the surface of the stove with no danger of blindness for the male or female welder.