Edward F (1 Aug 2012)
"Obama's name was Barry Soetoro. Soetoro (pron. Sutoro) translates in Hebrew to:  samech =60, vov = 6, tof = 400, reish = 200 adding to 666"


 

I thought you would like to see this.
__
Thanks. Interesting!
John

Barack Hussein Obama's was at one time known as Barry Soetoro, Calculate the number of his name.  

If Obama was ever designated as, known as, or called 'Barry Soetoro','Barry', or 'Soetoro' these could each correctly be said to be his name(or one of his names, or a name of his) according to Dictionary.com definition of the noun form of 'name'-see directly below. As well as 'Barack', 'Obama','Hussein','Barack Hussein Obama' and the ever popular 'Barack Obama' really any combination as long as he was designated as, known as, or called it. 'Name' and 'legal name' or 'full name' or 'entire name' are not the same thing according to any definition I could find. The Bible references the anti-Christs 'name' not his 'legal name' or his 'full name'. Calculate the number of his name, using God's Holy language I would think. I have not jumped to any conclusion about all of this, but it is interesting.
 
As I pointed out 'name' and 'full name' or 'legal name' or 'entire name' are not the same thing according to
Dictionary.com definition below(http://dictionary.reference.com/browse/name?s=t&ld=1087) in fact there is no mention of 'full name' 'entire name' or 'legal name' or anything similar in any definition of the word 'name' that I could find. No mention of legality in any way.
name [neym] Show IPA noun, verb, named, nam·ing, adjective  (I only included relevant noun form definition)
noun
1. a word or a combination of words by which a person, place, or thing, a body or class, or any object of thought is designated, called, or known.
2. mere designation, as distinguished from fact: He was a king in name only.
3. an appellation, title, or epithet, applied descriptively, in honor, abuse, etc.
4. a reputation of a particular kind given by common opinion: to protect one's good name.
5. a distinguished, famous, or great reputation; fame: to make a name for oneself
 

Soetoro or Sutoro - "oe" is pronounced /u/ in Javanese please read #1 below, Hebrew Alphabet with numeric values see #2 below

it apperas to be a fact that 'Soetoro' translates in Hebrew to: samech, vov, tof, reish

s = samech or samekh =   60

oe =  /u/= vov or vav=  6

t = tof or taf  =    400

o = na

r = reish =   200

o = na

60 + 6 + 400 + 200 = 666

there is no equivalent to 'o' in the hebrew written language, it is my understanding that vowels are not written in hebrew (although they are pronounced) with the exception of the /u/ sound. vov can be the 'v' sound as in 'very', or the 'u' sound as in 'up' - as seen in the chart in #2 below.

It is my understanding that in Hebrew not only do the letters have a numeric value, the letters actually have a dual role as letter and numeral because Hebrew has no other number system: samech,vov,tof,reish is literally the number 666, it can be a word as explained, but it is how the number 666 could be expressed regardless of any coincidental relationship to a word. The number 666 can be expressed in Hebrew by any letter/numeral combination that adds to 666. If it were just a number the typical way to express it would be largest to smallest 400,200,60,6 but it is 60,6,400,200 the last two switched with the first two. Would this indicate he's sort of twisted and backwards?

remember whether 'Sutoro' or 'Soetoro' it is still pronouned the same and would translate to: samech, vov, tof, reish

#1

larger print is important part

http://languagelog.ldc.upenn.edu/nll/?p=528 link to full article

Soetoro is a typical Javanese name, pronounced [sutoro]. As we saw in the case of the fancifully named Batman bin Suparman, the Su- or Soe- prefix (from a Sanskritic root meaning 'good, fortunate') is very common in Javanese names. The oe spelling is a colonial vestige, as that digraph was used in the Dutch East Indies to represent /u/ when a standard Roman orthography was introduced to Javanese, Malay, and other local languages in the nineteenth century. After Indonesian independence, in 1950, spelling in the national language was modified to render /u/ as u, perhaps because oe was the orthographic element that looked most egregiously Dutch. (In 1972 there were additional spelling reforms to change tj, dj, and j to c, j, and y respectively.)

#2

http://carm.org/greek-and-hebrew-alphabets-numeric-equivalents link to full article

Hebrew
Letter

Hebrew
Name

English
Letter

Numeric
Value


Hebrew
Letter

Hebrew
Name

English
Letter

Numeric
Value

א

aleph

silent (

א)

1 or 1000

ל

lamed

l

ow

30

ב

bet

b

oy

2

מ,ם

*

mem

m

ike

40

ג

gimel

g

od

3

ן,נ

*

nun

n

ew

50

ד

deled

d

og

4

ס

samech

sam

60

ה

heh

hi

5

ע

ayin

silent

70

ו

vov

very, up

6

ף,פ

*

pey

p

et, phone

80

ז

zayin

z

ebrea

7

ץ,צ

*

tzadi

nets

90

ח

ches

bach

8

ק

kuf

q, kit

100

ט

tes

t

est

9

ר

reish

race

200

י

yod

y

ou

10

ש

shin

sam,

shem

300

ך,כ

*

chof

kit

20

ת

tof

test

400


Letter
final form

Hebrew
Name

Numeric
Value

ך

final chof

500

מ

final mem

600

ן

final nun

700

ף

 

final pey

 

 

800