In 1982, I wrote a computer program (later known as Ars Magna TM) which used a dictionary to produce all possible anagrams for a phrase entered by the user. At about the same time, Jim Woods of the NASA/Ames Research Center in California wrote a similar program. Perhaps there are more, though I haven\u27t heard of them
In my notebooks I have a large section called logological orthography. One heading under that sectio...
Anagramming presidential names - rearranging their letters into other words, hopefully bearing some ...
The appeal in constructing anagrams lies in the balance between the extreme confinement of working w...
In a recent issue of Word Ways, Harry Stern closed an otherwise wonderful article by impugning the v...
What\u27s so interesting about anagrams? They\u27re just rearrangements of letters. Couldn\u27t\u2...
Every good anagram is, in some sense, apposite to the subject being anagrammed. This being so, the ...
Traditionally a favorite linguistic recreation, anagramming becomes especially diverting when applie...
I have been asked by the editors to share my expertise on anagrams with the readers of Word Ways. Bu...
The year 1973 will be remembered as witnessing the publication of a book that goes to the very heart...
Some lovers of language are merely smitten, others are outright crazy. I\u27m in the former categor...
While writing this article about computers vs. the English language, I searched my brain for some ey...
A book containing apposite letter-unit anagrams of every verse in three complete books of the King J...
There are several criteria available for judging the quality of an anagram. To begin with, an anagr...
Take the initial letter of each word in a common phrase, saying or longer quote, rearrange them and ...
While scholars argue the merits of former presidents, recent or otherwise, there is scant effort to ...
In my notebooks I have a large section called logological orthography. One heading under that sectio...
Anagramming presidential names - rearranging their letters into other words, hopefully bearing some ...
The appeal in constructing anagrams lies in the balance between the extreme confinement of working w...
In a recent issue of Word Ways, Harry Stern closed an otherwise wonderful article by impugning the v...
What\u27s so interesting about anagrams? They\u27re just rearrangements of letters. Couldn\u27t\u2...
Every good anagram is, in some sense, apposite to the subject being anagrammed. This being so, the ...
Traditionally a favorite linguistic recreation, anagramming becomes especially diverting when applie...
I have been asked by the editors to share my expertise on anagrams with the readers of Word Ways. Bu...
The year 1973 will be remembered as witnessing the publication of a book that goes to the very heart...
Some lovers of language are merely smitten, others are outright crazy. I\u27m in the former categor...
While writing this article about computers vs. the English language, I searched my brain for some ey...
A book containing apposite letter-unit anagrams of every verse in three complete books of the King J...
There are several criteria available for judging the quality of an anagram. To begin with, an anagr...
Take the initial letter of each word in a common phrase, saying or longer quote, rearrange them and ...
While scholars argue the merits of former presidents, recent or otherwise, there is scant effort to ...
In my notebooks I have a large section called logological orthography. One heading under that sectio...
Anagramming presidential names - rearranging their letters into other words, hopefully bearing some ...
The appeal in constructing anagrams lies in the balance between the extreme confinement of working w...