Yeah, but there's an extra e in German Shorthaired-Pointer, so it's not simply transposing the letters. Why are you allowed the extra letter? On Wed, Oct 7, 2009 at 3:10 PM, Ed Pegg Jr <ed@mathpuzzle.com> wrote:
In Logology, an anagram is used to describe a word or phrase that can be clued by an arrangement of it's letters.
Metamorphosis = Promises a moth. Military weapon = Employ it in a war. The Disney Corporation = Deep in cartoon history The Leaning Tower of Pisa = I spot one giant flaw here... What is the square root of nine? = THREE, for an equation shows it!
A Transposal is usually reserved for documentable words or phrases that have exactly the same letters. They do not need to share meaning. For example, the longest transposal in Random House 2nd Unabridged is
secondary qualities, quasi-considerately
Other long transposals from an online dictionary are ---
antiparticles paternalistic conservatoire overreactions aristotelian retaliations obscurantist subtractions definability identifiably arthroscopes crapshooters
Ed Pegg Jr
--- On Wed, 10/7/09, Allan Wechsler <acwacw@gmail.com> wrote:
From: Allan Wechsler <acwacw@gmail.com> Subject: Re: [math-fun] German Shorthair Pointer, Paris-Harrington theorem To: "math-fun" <math-fun@mailman.xmission.com> Cc: ed@mathpuzzle.com Date: Wednesday, October 7, 2009, 4:55 PM
I don't think there is one, JJ. I think the point is that PARIS HARRINGTON THEOREM and GERMAN SHORTHAIRED POINTER are something like anagrams. Something like, but not exactly, so I'm not sure what Ed means either.
On Wed, Oct 7, 2009 at 2:53 AM, Joerg Arndt <arndt@jjj.de> wrote:
* Ed Pegg Jr <ed@mathpuzzle.com> [Oct 07. 2009 17:46]:
German Shorthair Pointer, Paris-Harrington theorem
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Paris-Harrington_theorem http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/German_Shorthaired_Pointer
This is one of the longest well-mixed transposals in Wikipedia.
--Ed Pegg Jr
What is the connection to congruent numbers here?
cheers, jj
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