| Title: | The Joy of Lex |
| Notice: | A Notes File even your grammar could love |
| Moderator: | THEBAY::SYSTEM |
| Created: | Fri Feb 28 1986 |
| Last Modified: | Mon Jun 02 1997 |
| Last Successful Update: | Fri Jun 06 1997 |
| Number of topics: | 1192 |
| Total number of notes: | 42769 |
This is tough!
How quickly can you find out what is so
unusual about this paragraph? It looks so
ordinary that you would think that nothing
at all was wrong with it, and, in fact, nothing
is. But it is UNUSUAL. Why? If you study it
you may find out, but I'm not going to assist
you in any way; you must do it without
coaching. If you work at it for long, I think it
will dawn on you, but who knows? So go to
work and try your skill.
(Par is about an hour.)
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The above is a ReWoP transcript (reprinted without permission, etc.) of a
paper I saw tacked to the wall by our copy machine. I'll try to describe its
appearance. (I hope the problem concerns the content and not the appearance.)
The original uses a not-too-unusual font (after a quick scan of a Letraset
poster near me, I decided it looked like an upright "Le Griffe" or an informal,
less ornate "Agincourt" or "Old English"). Its large and bold type size pretty
much fills, and is centered on, the 8�x11 page. "This is tough!" is underlined.
I duplicated the number of lines and the words per line. It has a ragged(?)
right margin. It has one space after full punctuation stops (whatever happened
to two spaces?).
Does anyone see its unusual-ness? Has anyone seen a copy of the original?
(I give up.)
| T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 567.1 | RICKS::SATOW | Thu Oct 06 1988 13:33 | 14 | ||
Are we supposed to post answers/guesses here? I think I know the answer. For a hint, press <Return> Hint: etaoin shrdlu For the answer, press <Return> There are no e's in the paragraph. `E' is the most commonly used letter in the English language, by a wide margin. Clay | |||||
| 567.2 | don't look | LISP::DERAMO | Daniel V. {AITG,LISP,ZFC}:: D'Eramo | Thu Oct 06 1988 17:16 | 7 |
Reply .1 got it. I once read of someone who wrote (or at
least started work on) a series of 26 books, each of which
did not use one of the letters of the alphabet. He claimed
that doing the "e" book was a horrible torture.
Dan
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| 567.3 | Note: no spoiler in my response... | SSGBPM::KENAH | Overlapping chapters | Thu Oct 06 1988 19:04 | 12 |
An hour? Would you believe 15 seconds?
Really, considering the setting (a conference on language) and
the setup ("his is tough" and the fact that it's a language
puzzle posed to language lovers, I'm surprised there was a 19
minute gap between the posting of the original question and the
first (correct) answer.
Besides, it's a common puzzle. By the time an alert reader gets
to the third line, the answer becomes obvious.
andrew
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| 567.4 | EAGLE1::EGGERS | Tom,293-5358,VAX&MIPS Architecture | Thu Oct 06 1988 22:04 | 3 | |
Yeah. It took me longer to verify my immediate conjecture (no ees) than
it did to come up with the conjecture. I have seen similar paragraphs
before.
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