Traditionally a favorite linguistic recreation, anagramming becomes especially diverting when applied to personal names. The typical result is a phrase which in some respect describes the person associated with the name. In Howard Bergerson\u27s familiar work Palindromes and Anagrams, there are eight anagrams on the name William Ewart Gladstone, each giving someone\u27s perception of that man
In 1982, I wrote a computer program (later known as Ars Magna TM) which used a dictionary to produce...
In her November 1973 Word Ways review of Howard Bergerson\u27s new book, Palindromes and Anagrams (D...
I have been asked by the editors to share my expertise on anagrams with the readers of Word Ways. Bu...
For many years, wordsmiths have been devising anagrams based on the first name and surname of all so...
In a recent issue of Word Ways, Harry Stern closed an otherwise wonderful article by impugning the v...
The year 1976 witnessed a unique melding of American history and presidential politics. In view of t...
Anagramming presidential names - rearranging their letters into other words, hopefully bearing some ...
Some lovers of language are merely smitten, others are outright crazy. I\u27m in the former categor...
Every good anagram is, in some sense, apposite to the subject being anagrammed. This being so, the ...
What\u27s so interesting about anagrams? They\u27re just rearrangements of letters. Couldn\u27t\u2...
Writers and other public figures have for centuries anagrammed their names to form pen names. The m...
The year 1973 will be remembered as witnessing the publication of a book that goes to the very heart...
While scholars argue the merits of former presidents, recent or otherwise, there is scant effort to ...
At one time or another, everybody is asked to sign an autograph book, a school yearbook, a wedding b...
The appeal in constructing anagrams lies in the balance between the extreme confinement of working w...
In 1982, I wrote a computer program (later known as Ars Magna TM) which used a dictionary to produce...
In her November 1973 Word Ways review of Howard Bergerson\u27s new book, Palindromes and Anagrams (D...
I have been asked by the editors to share my expertise on anagrams with the readers of Word Ways. Bu...
For many years, wordsmiths have been devising anagrams based on the first name and surname of all so...
In a recent issue of Word Ways, Harry Stern closed an otherwise wonderful article by impugning the v...
The year 1976 witnessed a unique melding of American history and presidential politics. In view of t...
Anagramming presidential names - rearranging their letters into other words, hopefully bearing some ...
Some lovers of language are merely smitten, others are outright crazy. I\u27m in the former categor...
Every good anagram is, in some sense, apposite to the subject being anagrammed. This being so, the ...
What\u27s so interesting about anagrams? They\u27re just rearrangements of letters. Couldn\u27t\u2...
Writers and other public figures have for centuries anagrammed their names to form pen names. The m...
The year 1973 will be remembered as witnessing the publication of a book that goes to the very heart...
While scholars argue the merits of former presidents, recent or otherwise, there is scant effort to ...
At one time or another, everybody is asked to sign an autograph book, a school yearbook, a wedding b...
The appeal in constructing anagrams lies in the balance between the extreme confinement of working w...
In 1982, I wrote a computer program (later known as Ars Magna TM) which used a dictionary to produce...
In her November 1973 Word Ways review of Howard Bergerson\u27s new book, Palindromes and Anagrams (D...
I have been asked by the editors to share my expertise on anagrams with the readers of Word Ways. Bu...