Dream Meaning


Important advice to dreamers: 

If your dream has a bad meaning then you must do something and you could stop it to happen if you will right then tell your friends or your family about it loudly. Ancestors also advice to the dreamer to get a glass of water, bring it outside your house and look for a tree, any tree then gargle the water and spit it to the trunk of the tree with words "You will take all the bad meaning of my dreams, all my bad dream will not happen". After doing it, you must go back inside your house without looking back, left or right but just go straight back inside your house and start praying.

Another powerful advice is to PRAY to BATHALA, pray to GOD the creator of the Universe. HE is most powerful one to protect the dreamer, to reverse all bad dreams. But if your dream means good then pray to God and ask him to make it happen as soon as possible.

Dreaming of Apples Meaning

Dream Meaning OF WEARING BLUE OR PURPLE


Apples

Dreaming of apples is a very good dream; it indicates a long and happy life, success in business and in love.

For a woman with child; to dream of apples denotes that she will have a son who will be very great and wealthy.

I am a follower of the Old Ptolemy. Claudius Ptolemy (/ˈtɒləmi/; Greek: Κλαύδιος Πτολεμαῖος, Klaúdios Ptolemaîos [kláwdios ptolɛmɛ́ːos]; Latin: Claudius Ptolemaeus; c. AD 100 – c. 170) was a Greekwriter, known as a mathematician, astronomer, geographer, astrologer, and poet of a single epigram in the Greek Anthology. He lived in the city of Alexandria in the Roman province of Egypt, wrote in Koine Greek, and held Roman citizenship. Beyond that, few reliable details of his life are known. His birthplace has been given as Ptolemais Hermiou in the Thebaid in an uncorroborated statement by the 14th-century astronomer Theodore Meliteniotes. This is a very late attestation, however, and there is no other reason to suppose that he ever lived elsewhere than Alexandria, where he died around AD 168. Ptolemy wrote several scientific treatises, three of which were of importance to later Byzantine, Islamic and European science. The first is the astronomical treatise now known as the Almagest, although it was originally entitled the Mathematical Treatise (Μαθηματικὴ Σύνταξις, Mathēmatikē Syntaxis) and then known as the Great Treatise (Ἡ Μεγάλη Σύνταξις, Hē Megálē Syntaxis). The second is the Geography, which is a thorough discussion of the geographic knowledge of the Greco-Roman world. The third is the astrological treatise in which he attempted to adapt horoscopic astrology to the Aristotelian natural philosophy of his day. This is sometimes known as the Apotelesmatika (Ἀποτελεσματικά) but more commonly known as the Tetrabiblos from the Greek (Τετράβιβλος) meaning "Four Books" or by the Latin Quadripartitum. .

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