From Middle English moten, Old English mōtan (“may, may, have the possibility, be forced, may, must”), Proto-Germanic *mōtaną (“may, must, be delegated”), Proto-Proto-Indo-European *med- (“to acquire, possess, be responsible”). Related to Dutch moeten (“must, must”), German must (“must, must”), Ancient Greek μέδω (medō, “rule, rule, rule”). Bound to empty. From Middle English word, from Old English word (“grain of sand; Atom; Atom”), but of uncertain ultimate origin. Sometimes associated with Spanish mota (“bacon”) and English mud. [1] We are not sure of the origin of the word mote, except that it is related to Germanic words meaning “sawdust or sand, tiny particles of dust”. We think a dot is the smallest object, but astronomer Carl Sagan demonstrates a different perspective when he looked at a photo of Earth taken by Voyager I from far away and said, “We live on a speck of dust floating in a ray of sunshine.” Or how do you say to your brother, Let me cast the splinter of your eye; And behold, a ray is in your own eye? “So be it” is a ritual expression used by Freemasons, in Rosicrucianism and more recently by Neopagans meaning “so can it be”, “so it is necessary” or “it must be so” and can be said after the person saying the prayer has said “Amen”. The phrase appears in the Halliwell or Regius manuscript, the oldest known document of a society of Freemasons in England from the first half of the 15th century. [1] “Amen! Amen! So word hyt breast! Let`s all say it out of charyty.” [2] From a distance, with an allusion to the other meaning of mote (“a speck of dust”). mote (third person singular simple present mote, no present participle, past simple and past participle must) “You see the spot in your brother`s eye, but not the ray in yours,” Nicolai Egeland said appropriately. The cracks were red with the outer glow, and a stream, oblique, mottled light came on the way.
For example, they could compare two objects of the same size and mass, but from a different internal network – say, a speck of dust and a bacterium. mote m (moten singular defined, moter plural indefinite plural, motène plural defined) Compare West Frisian word (“peat dust”), Dutch word (“lawn dust; Sawdust; Grit”), Norwegian mutt (“bacon; Atom; Splinter; Bullet”). Cast the ray of your eye before noticing the spot in your neighbor`s. Hypocrite, first cast the ray of your own eye, then you will see to chase away the brilliance of your brother`s eye. Say the word: mote. It`s short and fast, isn`t it? The word corresponds to its meaning, which is something tiny: a speck of dust, a little down, a gold stain in the prospector`s pan. From Provençal or French word (“word”); See also Italian currency (“word”). From the French word (“word, dis”) or from the Occitan word. The term was taken up by neopagans and they use it in the same way in their ceremonies and rituals. [3].