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matrix

Sanskrit Mātṛ (मातृ) "mother"
also, "mother-goddesses, divine mother", as well as:

Mātṛ (मातृ) refers to the “cognizing subject”, according to Abhinava’s Tantrāloka verse 3.125-126.—Accordingly, “The cognizing subject (mātṛ) is a state of consciousness independent of the consonance of the instrumental means (upāya of knowledge) such as the object of knowledge and the rest (and is self-established in the immediacy of the awareness that:) ‘I am’ (and so latently containing within itself all knowledge) is the knower (jñātṛ) like one who knows the scriptures (but having no desire to explain them remains silent).” [Manthanabhairavatantram]

Mātrī (मात्री), adjective f. (to m. *mātra, from Sanskrit mātṛ + a?), "of the mother, maternal"

late 14th century, matris, matrice, "uterus, womb"
from Latin mātrix (genitive mātricis) "female animal kept for breeding; register, list"
in Late Latin "womb," also "source, origin"
māter (genitive mātris) "mother" + -trix (with haplology)
-trix fem. agential suffix, from Latin, corresponding to masc. -tor; from Proto-Indo-European *-trih, cognate with the Sanskrit suffix -त्री (-trī)

matrix noun
  • mother; womb/woman
  • also: origin
  • something within or from which something else originates, develops, or takes form
  • a mold from which a relief surface is made
  • the natural material (such as soil or rock) in which something (such as a fossil or crystal) is embedded; material in which something is enclosed or embedded (as for protection or study)
  • an electroformed impression of a phonograph record used for mass-producing duplicates of the original
  • the extracellular substance in which tissue cells (as of connective tissue) are embedded
  • a rectangular array of mathematical elements of simultaneous that can be combined to form sums and products with similar arrays having an appropriate number of rows and columns; something resembling a mathematical matrix especially in rectangular arrangement of elements into rows and columns; an array of circuit elements for performing a specific function

In the 21st century, there are attempts to remove the word mother from the dictionary, replacing it with "gestational" or "birthing person", which can, in further consequence, easily replace the human being all together.

In the 16th century, the word matrix was successfully obfuscated to, first, mean additional things as to, eventually, primarily mean something else entirely, no longer having anything to do with the uterus and the womb. (See Conventional Dictionary Entries)

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Legend

~☉~lucid definition; added layer of lucidity, or aethereal context
classic definition
artificium definition; usually words which have undergone a warped evolution, or a complete perversion of the original sense
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