0 through 9
10 through 19
20 through 29
30 through 39
40 through 49
50 through 59
60 through 69
70 through 79
80 through 89
90 through 100
Don't forget to apply your exceptions (S,K,V)
0 through 9
10 through 19
20 through 29
30 through 39
40 through 49
50 through 59
60 through 69
70 through 79
80 through 89
90 through 100
Thanks for this Zach! I am trying to compile a list of the most repeated numbers we see in news and sports in my notes, so as to have a fast key to decode with. Being a musician I am focused on memorizing as much of the coding as I can.
ReplyDeleteThe most intriguing thing is, that there are no 44's and only (2) 144's [44 & 71]: "Forty Four" = 144
ReplyDelete71 / 44 = 1.61 [The Golden Ratio]
The other is that there are only (2) 33's [16 & 90]:
90 - 16 = 74 <===
90 + 16 = 106 [Prophecy]
90 x 16 = 1440 <===
There are no 106's [Prophecy], but there are (2) 165's:
"United Nations" = 165 = "Divide and Conquer"
Those (2) Numbers:
"Twenty Two" = 165
"Thirty Seven" = 165
Interesting connection to the word "Perfect":
"Perfect" = 37 & 73 [Reflections]
37 is the 12th Prime
73 is the 21st Prime [Reflections Again]
157 is the 37th Prime
367 is the 73rd Prime
"One Hundred Fifty Seven" = 239 <==
"Three Hundred Sixty Seven" = 112 & 292 [29 + 92 = 121]
"Revelation" = 121
When using pythagorean I know s = 9
ReplyDeleteWhat do K & V equal?
http://3.bp.blogspot.com/-sYC2cGpwCMY/VNbJs8QbzEI/AAAAAAAANEM/vF9Ue3Mm57Q/s1600/Screen%2BShot%2B2015-02-07%2Bat%2B6.27.29%2BPM.png
DeleteSave this URL somewhere so you can always access it :-)
And @Zach : Thank you very much, appreciate it :-)
Thanks Gomez,
DeleteDoes this mean K = 9 & V = 18?
I should already know this I know I've heard it on one of Zach's vids, wasn't taking notes the first few videos I watched
K = 2, 11 WITH K exception, V = 4, 22 WITH V exception.
DeleteExample: Kill = 2+9+3+3 = 17, with K expection = 11+9+3+3 = 26.
Funny how in both nine and five are the same. Wonder if that is why 9-5 is the average work day?
ReplyDeleteGood Call Z. What's that website you visit frequently for Prime #'s ? so we can Reference it here also.
ReplyDeleteI think he uses this - http://www.pl.numberempire.com/101 , I use it personally. Instead of /101 just put /number you want :)
DeleteZach, I made a reference for this information and more so that it is searchable with Ctrl+F.
ReplyDeletehttp://fieldsofwhite.blogspot.com/p/number-reference.html
My list has the following:
(English Gematria, English Ordinal, English Sumerian, English Reduction, Pythagorean (K,S,V, exceptions), Jewish Gematria, Prime Number)
The underlined numbers are the primes.
I have the first 100 numbers done and still working to add more.