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As a compiler of all-vowel words, I found this description of a Tao Lin book intriguing: " EEEEE EEE EEEE is a pleasingly sophisticated work, an unself-conscious yet commanding tour de force about the search for meaning in a culture gone mad with celebrities and advertising." The title refers to dolphins, who squeak "Eeeee Eee Eeee" to express their feelings, notwithstanding their capacity to talk like people.
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Incomplexpletives by Jonathan Caws-Elwitt: "Well of all the . . ." "What the . . . !" "Well! I never [. . .]!" "Why, I oughta . . ."
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Lively Emptings: "The yeast sediment in the bottom of a beer barrel. Used in place of eggs in some recipes." (From Chef2Chef.net, via Jonathan.)
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Luke Metcalfe, creator of a charming online anagram dictionary, suggests that "to some small degree we've been subconsciously shaping our language to make nice anagrams." He is referring to the huge number of anagrams that are surprisingly fitting, such as: eternity and entirety, backward and drawback, discern and rescind, demand and madden, comedian and demoniac, American and cinerama, aspirate and parasite, oldies and soiled, lust and slut.
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Fun with quotation marks: Capital "A" and "Capital A" mean two different things in the context of this old architecture diagram. To learn the surprising answer, see my guest blog at the Society for the Promotion of Good Grammar.
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Referring to the Dictionary of All-Consonant Words, Jonathan wrote: I visited Merriam-Webster online just now. Due to browser sluggishness, the consonants in the phonetic display of "bookkeeper" loaded first (presumably because the vowels, which are all represented with accent marks, are special characters). For just an instant, M-W was an all-consonant dictionary!
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Tauba Auerbach's "Listen/Silent" anagram reminds me of a poem by Thomas Moore: When to sad Music silent you listen, And tears on those eyelids tremble like dew, Oh, then there dwells in those eyes as they glisten A sweet holy charm that mirth never knew.
I like the idea of teardrops being a magical potion, glistening with enchantment of a shadowy (mirthless) yet sacred nature.
This anagram is by Tauba Auerbach and appears here by special arrangement.
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An engineer and armchair philosopher named Joel created this terrific bar graph of one-letter words that appear in Google's 8-trillion page index. "A" is the most common single letter on Google, followed by "e," "i," "o," and "s." At first I was surprised that "v" appears more often than the vowel "u," but then I figured it must have to do with "v" appearing as a Roman numeral. I like how the letter index goes all the way to 30, as if there are slots available for letters that only appear in leap years or something.
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Original Content Copyright © 2025 by Craig Conley. All rights reserved.
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