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Deciphering 1

In the last arrangement, “and (English)” and “et (French or Latin)” coincide.

“Rome_o” calls to mind Italian “o”, which means English “or”. Further, “Rome” and “Juli” give us “Julius Caesar”.

So we put “us” beneath “o” as follows

Then “Julius_et” leads us to “Et tu Brute”, the famous phrase in the drama Julius Caesar. This Latin phrase means “And you Brutus?”. “Brute” is the vocative of Brutus. So we continue the arrangement

Recall that Italian “e” is English “and”. We notice lauguages of and/et/e are English/French/Italian, which coincides with upstream of the genealogy of Romeo story.

In (D1g) “et” belongs to “Et tu Brute?”, which we regard as Latin phrase usually. In the arrangement we see “our tie” at the 2nd and 4th columns. So it would be worthy to check the multinationality of this phrase carefully.

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