Anagrams
Here are some good anagrams:
- A Ballet Dancer: Alert, Balanced
- A Decimal Point: I'm a Dot in Place
- Alec Guinness: Genuine Class
- Animosity: Is No Amity
- Bottoms Up: Pubs' Motto
- Contradiction: Accord not in it
- Dormitory: Dirty Room
- Eleven plus two: Twelve plus one
- Listen: Silent
- Semolina: Is No Meal
- Slot Machines: Cash Lost in 'em
- Snooze Alarms: Alas! No More Z's
- The Earthquakes: That Queer Shake
- The Morse Code: Here Come Dots
- The Public Art Galleries: Large Picture Halls, I Bet
Palindromes
Here are some good palindromes:
- A man, a plan, a canal — Panama! (One could reply, "No, it's a banana bastion.")
- A man, a plan, a cat, a canal — Panama!
- A man, a plan, a cat, a ham, a yak, a yam, a hat, a canal — Panama!
- Able was I ere I saw Elba. (Napolean could have said this when he was exiled to the island of Elba, if he spoke English.)
- Are we not drawn onward, we few, drawn onward to new era?
- Cigar? Toss it in a can. It is so tragic.
- Doc, note, I dissent. A fast never prevents a fatness. I diet on cod.
- Dog, as a devil deified, lived as a god.
- Dogma? I am God.
- Drab as a fool, aloof as a bard.
- Go hang a salami, I'm a lasagna hog.
- Ma is as selfless as I am.
- Madam, I'm Adam. (Eve replied simply, "Eve.")
- Madam, in Eden, I'm Adam.
- No sir, prefer prison.
- Pa's a sap.
- Niagara, O roar again.
- Senile felines
- Sniff'um muffins.
- Ten animals I slam in a net.
- Straw? No, too stupid a fad. I put soot on warts.
- Was it a cat I saw?
- Yreka Bakery (in Yreka, California)
- saippuakauppias (15 letters), soap dealer
- saippurakaruppias (17 letters), soap salesman
- saippuakivikauppias (19 letters), lye dealer
- saippuakuppinippukauppias (25 letters), soap cup dealer
"Kinnikinnick," the name of a plant and also a dried leaf and bark mixture smoked by Cree indians, is not a palindrome, but it is sometimes (mis)spelled as a palindrome in two different ways: "kinnikinnik" (11 letters) and "kinnik-kinnik" (12 letters). Each half of the last palindrome is itself a palindrome.
The shortest English palindromic word, not counting one-letter words, is "aa," which is a Hawaiian word for a kind of lava.
English needs a synonym for "palindrome" that is itself a palindrome. The word should have meaningful roots, like the word "palindrome", which derives from Greek palin, again + Greek dromos, racecourse or running. Here are some candidate palindromic synonyms for palidrome.
- retreverter — From "retreat" (from Old French retrere from
Latin retrahere), to draw back + Latin vertere , to turn.
(From Seth Hoyt.) This is almost perfect. The roots are meaningful. Both
roots are Latin. The only drawback is that "retre-" is not as
familiar as "retro-".
- retrovorter — From "retro-", backwards + "vortex" (variant of "vertex", from Latin vertere, turn), turning column. (From Seth Hoyt.) It begins nicely with "retro-", but "vorter" is a stretch.
- palinilap — From Greek palin, again + English "lap",
a racecourse lap or a fold. It has fairly meaningful roots. It is a natural
modification of the familiar word "palindrome". A brief web search
indicates that this may be the most popular candidate.
- emordrome — From Greek dromos, racecourse or running. But emor has no appropriate meaning. (Greek emor may mean "without a share".)
- rotor or rotator — From Latin rota, wheel.
A rotation of 180 degrees is kind of like a reversal, but not really.
- mynonym — It sounds like it could be synonym for palindrome. From Greek onyma name. But myn has no appropriate meaning. (Greek myn may mean an excuse, pretense, or diversion.)
- reversrever — From Latin re, back + vertere, turn. But this word is too contrived.
- wordrow — From "word" + "row". But it contains no part that means reversal.
Pangrams
Veldt jynx grimps waqf zho buck.
Source: Michael Jones of Chicago, in the Guinness Book.Repeated Words
Ann where Bob had had had had had had had had
had had had had written next to it as a correction.
Answer:
Ann, where Bob had had "had," had had "had had." "Had
had" had had "had"
written next to it as a correction.
(Ann and Bob were taking a grammar exam.)
The following sentence has 21 "ands" in a row:(Ann and Bob were taking a grammar exam.)
Wouldn't the sentence "I want to put a
hyphen between the words FISH and AND and AND and CHIPS in my FISH-AND-CHIPS
sign" have been clearer if quotation marks had been placed before "FISH," and
between "FISH" and "and," and "and"
and "AND," and "AND" and "and," and "and" and "AND," and "AND" and "and," and
"and" and "CHIPS," as well as after "CHIPS?"
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