Library

Video Player is loading.
 
Current Time 7:49
Duration 11:55
Loaded: 0.00%
 
x1.00


Back

Games & Quizzes

Training Mode - Typing
Fill the gaps to the Lyric - Best method
Training Mode - Picking
Pick the correct word to fill in the gap
Fill In The Blank
Find the missing words in a sentence Requires 5 vocabulary annotations
Vocabulary Match
Match the words to the definitions Requires 10 vocabulary annotations

You may need to watch a part of the video to unlock quizzes

Don't forget to Sign In to save your points

Challenge Accomplished

PERFECT HITS +NaN
HITS +NaN
LONGEST STREAK +NaN
TOTAL +
- //

We couldn't find definitions for the word you were looking for.
Or maybe the current language is not supported

  • 00:00

    I discovered a long distance alignment that leads from France to the United Kingdom.

  • 00:05

    This one begins very close to Chartres in both time and space.

  • 00:09

    Chartres cathedral was built at the same time as Bourges cathedral and is only a hundred

  • 00:14

    miles away.

  • 00:17

    When I was studying Bourges cathedral, I kept thinking about the connections between the

  • 00:22

    founders of the Gothic style and the Templars.

  • 00:25

    So I drew a line in Google Earth from the central entry of Bourges cathedral to the

  • 00:30

    entry of Rosslyn chapel in Scotland.

  • 00:34

    So what?

  • 00:35

    You can draw a line between any two points.

  • 00:38

    But you won't believe what the line passes directly over in London...the Headquarters

  • 00:43

    of the United Grand Freemasonic Lodge of England.

  • 00:47

    The United Grand Lodge of England is the main governing body of Freemasonry within England,

  • 00:54

    Wales, and much of the former British empire.

  • 00:57

    The building is on Great Queen Street, no less.

  • 01:01

    UGLE as the organization is known seems to be a fitting acronym for its ugly-as-sin container,

  • 01:07

    historically third on the site since Masonic meetings first started here in 1775, a year

  • 01:14

    before the American revolution.

  • 01:16

    Perhaps some of America's Masonic founding fathers planned the revolution here, I'm not

  • 01:21

    sure.

  • 01:23

    When the Templars were around they controlled a sizable district less than half a mile away

  • 01:28

    in the City of London.

  • 01:31

    The Temple includes Temple Church, the adjacent Middle and Outer temples, and a host of related

  • 01:37

    buildings.

  • 01:39

    The Templars themselves said they designed the round portion of Temple Church after the

  • 01:43

    Church of the Holy Sepulchre in Jerusalem which also features a rotunda.

  • 01:49

    Perhaps politics motivated them to claim Christian provenance for their temple.

  • 01:55

    Long-time esoteric researcher John Smout says a better geometric comparison is between Temple

  • 02:01

    Church and the Dome of the Rock which seems to have a high degree of correlation with

  • 02:06

    the round church's ground plan.

  • 02:09

    This makes more sense to me as the Templars did take their name from the Temple mount

  • 02:13

    in Jerusalem.

  • 02:14

    Case in point, they were never known as the Knights of the Holy Sepulchre.

  • 02:20

    Whichever building was ultimately their template, the Templar influence was so powerful that

  • 02:25

    they actually got the Patriarch of Jerusalem to come to London and consecrate Temple Church

  • 02:31

    in 1185.

  • 02:34

    Temple Church was brought to the public's attention in The Da Vinci Code where it was

  • 02:38

    the scene of a shootout amidst marble effigies of medieval knights.

  • 02:44

    The Temple served at times as the residence of Kings and representatives of the Pope while

  • 02:49

    Temple Church itself served as a depository bank.

  • 02:53

    I believe Smout's geometric analysis of Temple Church is right on the money, if you'll pardon

  • 02:59

    the pun.

  • 03:00

    The Temple plan is laid out with triangles and squares, which we know from studying Chartres

  • 03:05

    Cathedral have hidden significance.

  • 03:08

    Triangles and squares are arranged in such a way as to depict three cubes.

  • 03:13

    The symbolism of three cubes is something we've seen before in the George Washington

  • 03:18

    Masonic National Memorial.

  • 03:21

    I believe three cubes symbolize the holographic nature of the universe: the human, planetary

  • 03:27

    and stellar scales resonating as a fractal structure.

  • 03:31

    As above, so below.

  • 03:33

    My reasons for coming to this unusual conclusion will become apparent in the Paris episodes.

  • 03:40

    After the Great Fire of London in 1666, Sir Christopher Wren was chosen to redesign St.

  • 03:47

    Paul's cathedral.

  • 03:48

    He oriented St. Paul's in line with the axis of Temple Church.

  • 03:53

    Extending beyond St. Paul's we see the alignment continues to the Bank of England.

  • 03:59

    The Bank was chartered in 1694 during the construction of Wren's cathedral.

  • 04:04

    More than just a local branch, the Bank of England is the central bank of the whole of

  • 04:09

    the United Kingdom and is the model on which most countries modern central banks are based.

  • 04:15

    The Bank of England is literally the mother of all banks.

  • 04:20

    Recall how the Templar's meteoric rise in power came in part by becoming the first transnational

  • 04:26

    bank, and how Temple Church itself acted as a bank whilst housing both royals and Papal

  • 04:33

    representatives.

  • 04:34

    By tracing the alignment from Temple Church to the Bank of England through St. Paul's

  • 04:38

    Cathedral, we draw a connection between Templars, the modern banking system, and the Church:

  • 04:44

    three powerful bedfellows.

  • 04:48

    The Bank of England presides over a street pyramid in the heart of the City of London.

  • 04:53

    The symbolism of the Bank over a pyramid suggests a hidden power relationship analogous to the

  • 04:59

    House of the Temple presiding over the pyramid of Washington DC.

  • 05:04

    After all, pyramids are clear symbols of hierarchy and one can read it as control from the top

  • 05:09

    down.

  • 05:12

    The base of the pyramid contains the London Stone, said to be the rock from which all

  • 05:16

    distances in the United Kingdom were measured.

  • 05:19

    The Romans laid this foundation stone in London just as they had done earlier with the Umbilicus

  • 05:25

    Urbis Romae.

  • 05:28

    You could say this pyramid was built on a rock-solid Roman foundation.

  • 05:34

    Some of the greatest secrets are hidden in plain sight.

  • 05:37

    Isn't that strange?

  • 05:38

    I mean if you ran a secret society, why painstakingly encrypt your greatest truths in alignments,

  • 05:44

    city plans, and in architecture?

  • 05:47

    I would have thought there were better ways of keeping secrets.

  • 05:52

    There must be some kind of power gained or maintained by hiding these truths out in the

  • 05:57

    open where many can see, but few understand.

  • 06:03

    Sir Christopher Wren was a brilliant mathematician, astronomer, geometer, and architect.

  • 06:08

    He was an enlightened man who clearly excelled in the Seven Liberal Arts.

  • 06:13

    St. Paul's cathedral is the most important building of Wren's architectural career.

  • 06:19

    Stephen Skinner pointed out in his book Sacred Geometry that the length of St. Paul's including

  • 06:25

    its entrance steps measures 555' and that this distance is equal to the height of the

  • 06:31

    Washington Monument.

  • 06:33

    Recall how triple 6's and 5's are encoded in this singular measure as 6660" = 555'.

  • 06:42

    St. Paul's length therefore symbolizes the relationship between macrocosm and microcosm.

  • 06:51

    The distance from the floor of the cathedral to the top of the cross on its dome is 365',

  • 06:57

    matching the height and symbolism of the Sun Tower at Chartres.

  • 07:02

    St. Paul's is one of the few places we're not surprised to see the English foot used

  • 07:07

    as the unit of measure.

  • 07:10

    Trying to decipher London from another angle, I was looking at Buckingham Palace and wondering

  • 07:15

    about the perfectly straight axis called the Mall in front of it.

  • 07:19

    Wanting to trace where this obvious gesture leads I need to ask where does the Royal axis

  • 07:25

    go?

  • 07:27

    It appears that the Mall leads to the Admiralty Arch but then the axis seems to fade away

  • 07:32

    in the confusion of buildings along the Strand.

  • 07:35

    Or does it?

  • 07:37

    Tracing the axis beginning at Buckingham Palace, passing over the Victoria memorial, traveling

  • 07:43

    along the Mall, going under the Admiralty Arch and through the buildings on the Strand,

  • 07:48

    the axis arrives precisely at Temple Bar.

  • 07:52

    Temple Bar was a gate designed by Sir Christopher Wren to ceremonially bar access to the City

  • 07:58

    of London.

  • 07:59

    It got the name Temple from being directly in front of the Templar compound.

  • 08:04

    The Temple was taken over by the Inns of Court after the Templars were ousted in 1307.

  • 08:11

    The Middle Temple and Outer Temple are two of the Inns of Court to which all barristers

  • 08:16

    in England must today belong.

  • 08:19

    In fact the phrase The Bar, meaning the legal profession as a whole, can be traced back

  • 08:24

    to Temple Bar.

  • 08:27

    Wren's gate is no longer there but tradition and the law remain.

  • 08:31

    Traditionally, the Lord Mayor would offer the Sword of State to the Queen when she passed

  • 08:35

    through the gate as a token of loyalty.

  • 08:38

    It is a little known legal fact that the monarch may not enter the City of London without the

  • 08:43

    permission of the Lord Mayor of London.

  • 08:46

    What's up with that?

  • 08:47

    I always thought the Queen was the one in charge.

  • 08:51

    You might be surprised to learn the The Lord Mayor is not the Mayor of London, nor is The

  • 08:56

    City of London the same as Greater London.

  • 08:59

    Confused?

  • 09:00

    The law can do that.

  • 09:03

    The person the Queen bows to is the Lord Mayor of London.

  • 09:06

    He's the guy who runs the City of London Corporation, a tiny private jurisdiction that covers only

  • 09:12

    about one square mile.

  • 09:14

    The Wealthiest Square Mile on Earth as it's often referred to is the sovereign state within

  • 09:19

    Greater London whose boundary closely follows the ancient Roman walls of Londinium.

  • 09:26

    In Isaac Newton's day there were more than 200,000 souls living within the Square Mile

  • 09:32

    but now that figure is down to less than 10,000.

  • 09:37

    Today the tiny City of London has become a leading center of global finance.

  • 09:42

    Other powerful sovereign cities within cities that come to mind are of course the United

  • 09:47

    Nations Headquarters and Vatican City.

  • 09:49

    This concludes our brief tour of London.

  • 09:50

    Where we're going next is a bit of a mystery.

All

The example sentences of SKINNER in videos (15 in total of 20)

just adverb before preposition or subordinating conjunction nicholas proper noun, singular squares noun, plural up preposition or subordinating conjunction to to skinner verb, base form , the determiner film noun, singular or mass gives verb, 3rd person singular present us personal pronoun one cardinal number final adjective gory adjective , glimpse noun, singular or mass
stephen proper noun, singular skinner proper noun, singular pointed verb, past tense out preposition or subordinating conjunction in preposition or subordinating conjunction his possessive pronoun book noun, singular or mass sacred proper noun, singular geometry proper noun, singular that preposition or subordinating conjunction the determiner length noun, singular or mass of preposition or subordinating conjunction st proper noun, singular . paul proper noun, singular 's possessive ending including verb, gerund or present participle
it personal pronoun should modal n't adverb be verb, base form surprising adjective that preposition or subordinating conjunction with preposition or subordinating conjunction a determiner name noun, singular or mass like preposition or subordinating conjunction burrhus proper noun, singular , he personal pronoun went verb, past participle by preposition or subordinating conjunction b proper noun, singular . f proper noun, singular . skinner proper noun, singular .
steven proper noun, singular walker proper noun, singular 's possessive ending book noun, singular or mass , i personal pronoun think verb, non-3rd person singular present , a determiner man noun, singular or mass who wh-pronoun began verb, past tense as preposition or subordinating conjunction a determiner skinnerain proper noun, singular , you personal pronoun know verb, non-3rd person singular present , skinner proper noun, singular boxes noun, plural
skinner proper noun, singular then adverb attached verb, past tense cables noun, plural to to the determiner birds noun, plural ' possessive ending heads noun, plural and coordinating conjunction had verb, past tense them personal pronoun peck verb, non-3rd person singular present at preposition or subordinating conjunction an determiner image noun, singular or mass of preposition or subordinating conjunction the determiner
the determiner topic noun, singular or mass of preposition or subordinating conjunction modes noun, plural of preposition or subordinating conjunction transportation noun, singular or mass you personal pronoun know verb, non-3rd person singular present that preposition or subordinating conjunction moped verb, past participle skinner noun, singular or mass uses verb, 3rd person singular present during preposition or subordinating conjunction the determiner chase noun, singular or mass scene noun, singular or mass well adverb
its possessive pronoun believed verb, past tense that preposition or subordinating conjunction the determiner tape noun, singular or mass was verb, past tense traced verb, past participle back adverb to to a determiner scottish adjective animator noun, singular or mass called verb, past participle andrew proper noun, singular skinner proper noun, singular
the determiner pigeons noun, plural who wh-pronoun would modal die verb, base form in preposition or subordinating conjunction a determiner coup noun, singular or mass for preposition or subordinating conjunction skinner noun, singular or mass the determiner national adjective research noun, singular or mass defense noun, singular or mass committee noun, singular or mass awarded verb, past participle
psychologists proper noun, singular like preposition or subordinating conjunction bf proper noun, singular skinner proper noun, singular began verb, past tense to to apply verb, base form these determiner methods noun, plural to to education noun, singular or mass , arguing verb, gerund or present participle that preposition or subordinating conjunction teachers noun, plural need verb, non-3rd person singular present
or coordinating conjunction skinner proper noun, singular box proper noun, singular - - a determiner confined verb, past tense space noun, singular or mass containing verb, gerund or present participle a determiner lever noun, singular or mass or coordinating conjunction button noun, singular or mass that preposition or subordinating conjunction an determiner animal noun, singular or mass could modal touch verb, base form
i personal pronoun 'm verb, non-3rd person singular present here adverb with preposition or subordinating conjunction becca proper noun, singular skinner proper noun, singular a determiner photographer noun, singular or mass and coordinating conjunction writer noun, singular or mass and coordinating conjunction tonight adverb 's possessive ending keynote noun, singular or mass speaker noun, singular or mass so preposition or subordinating conjunction this determiner is verb, 3rd person singular present
in preposition or subordinating conjunction taxi proper noun, singular , we personal pronoun see verb, non-3rd person singular present the determiner taxi proper noun, singular driver proper noun, singular id proper noun, singular reads verb, 3rd person singular present armin proper noun, singular tamzarian proper noun, singular , the determiner real adjective name noun, singular or mass of preposition or subordinating conjunction principle proper noun, singular skinner proper noun, singular
her possessive pronoun father noun, singular or mass s proper noun, singular business noun, singular or mass partner noun, singular or mass , kevin proper noun, singular skinner proper noun, singular , said verb, past tense that preposition or subordinating conjunction they personal pronoun had verb, past tense helped verb, past participle her possessive pronoun deal noun, singular or mass with preposition or subordinating conjunction the determiner
the determiner lever noun, singular or mass a determiner food noun, singular or mass pellet noun, singular or mass will modal come verb, base form out preposition or subordinating conjunction skinner proper noun, singular wanted verb, past tense to to see verb, base form if preposition or subordinating conjunction the determiner rat noun, singular or mass would modal
well adverb , what wh-determiner stroke noun, singular or mass of preposition or subordinating conjunction luck noun, singular or mass , thomas proper noun, singular skinner verb, non-3rd person singular present , cos verb, 3rd person singular present i personal pronoun 'm verb, non-3rd person singular present actually adverb building noun, singular or mass

Use "skinner" in a sentence | "skinner" example sentences

How to use "skinner" in a sentence?

  • I did The Frank Skinner Show, and they gave me a little jukebox-shaped CD player, which looks nice in the kitchen.
    -Robert Webb-
  • I saw stars like Helen Hayes, Maurice Evans, Tallulah Bankhead and Cornelia Otis Skinner. It was enchanting. I knew that was the world I wanted to be in.
    -Sada Thompson-
  • It's like the little rat in the Skinner box who says, "I've got this psychologist under my control. Every time I press the bar, he gives me a food pellet."
    -Jess Lair-
  • Anthony Skinner has a fire in his heart to worship God, and to encourage and equip others to do the same.
    -Matt Redman-
  • There must be something unique about man because otherwise, evidently, the ducks would be lecturing about Konrad Lorenz, and the rats would be writing papers about B. F. Skinner.
    -Jacob Bronowski-

Definition and meaning of SKINNER

What does "skinner mean?"

/ˈskinər/

noun
person who skins animals or prepares skins.
other
A person who prepares or deals in animal skins.