First there was Word. Then there was the Synonyms of Word. The Word was first.* The Synonyms next by usage and collected by the creator of MTHESAURUS10. Then there was Kenneth Udut.* He did something interesting in August of 2013. Then there was the Synonyms of Synonyms of Word. Then there was the Synonyms of Synonyms of Synonyms of Word. Then there was the Synonyms of Synonyms of Synonyms of Synonyms of Word. Then there was the Synonyms of Synonyms of Synonyms of Synonyms of Synonyms of Word. Then there was the Synonyms of Synonyms of Synonyms of Synonyms of Synonyms of Synonyms of Word. Then the MTHESAURUS10 was exhausted and there were no more words to be processed. Five Sets of Words.* This was SIGNIFICANT!* But what does it mean? He didn't know what to do. So he waited. On May 18, 2014, he decided to do something with this. He challenged himself to make it into a book and publish. An hour and a half later, the book was published on Amazon. It is here. http://www.amazon.com/Out-Context-Cross-linked-Thesaurus-context-ebook/dp/B00KFOQIG6 But, how do you describe the significance of something when you don't know what it is yet? You do the best you can, stop, and then wait. And so he waited. On August 11, 2015, he realized what he had to do. He had to connect the synonyms to the synonyms to form metaphors. "BUT - that's not how metaphors are formed!", one might say. Perhaps.* Yet perhaps this is exactly how it works. How many ways can two concepts be connected? Many. Very many. Extraordinarily many. All possibilities have not been mapped out yet. Perhaps they never will be. But Kenneth Udut, who is working on the project now, hopes to help people discover metaphors that have never been made previously in the history of the English language so when one ponders possible connections, THEY will create the connections themselves. There is something very simple lurking underneath all human concepts. What is it? Every concept is an analogy in some sense to another concept somehow. Metaphors provide the greatest amount of connective possibilities as they can draw upon (draw upon: a metaphor itself) anything one can imagine. When that happens, suddenly, a logical connection is formed between two concepts. Suddenly, things make more sense than they did before. Truly an amazing process. Kenneth Udut, August 11, 2015