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Title: Consonyms Post by Barukh on Oct 3rd, 2007, 2:42am Define consonym to be a word that has the same consonants as another word, in any order*. For instance, “limbo” and “mobile” are consonyms. Here’s the problem: find a triple of consonants that “produce” the maximum number of consonyms. The rules for the solution are as follows: 1. “Y” is considered a vowel. 2. No plural nouns. 3. Verbs are allowed only in infinitive form. 4. No personal names, names of places etc. are allowed. 5. Every consonant must be used once and only once. I don’t know the answer to this problem, or how difficult is it. Neither do I know if it’s original. I hope you will find it interesting, though. * There is a different definition of this on the Web. |
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Title: Re: Consonyms Post by FiBsTeR on Oct 3rd, 2007, 6:01am Must a word use the same number of consonants as its consonyms? Well seeing as [hide]T, N, R[/hide] are some of the most common consonants in the English language, maybe these are it, although my vocabulary isn't very large. I'm just writing whatever comes to mind, in no particular order, and they are, of course, not the only consonyms of the letters above: [hide]runt, torn, turn, nurture, rant, torrent, rent[/hide] I don't know how one would go about finding the "maximum", unless you had a way to search the OED (Oxford English Dictionary) for consonyms with a computer. |
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Title: Re: Consonyms Post by pex on Oct 3rd, 2007, 6:19am on 10/03/07 at 06:01:13, FiBsTeR wrote:
Adding to FiBsTeR's list (just from the top of my head): Using each consonant once: [hide]toner, entry, intro, train, enter, retina, routine, inertia, entire[/hide] Using some consonants multiple times: [hide]terrain[/hide] |
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Title: Re: Consonyms Post by FiBsTeR on Oct 3rd, 2007, 6:27am Or even: [hide]nature, neuter, turner (one who turns?), and ranter, renter, trainer, [and really, if allowing multiple uses of n,t,r, many infinitive verbs using n,t,r can be made nouns adding -er][/hide] |
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Title: Re: Consonyms Post by pex on Oct 3rd, 2007, 6:33am on 10/03/07 at 06:27:53, FiBsTeR wrote:
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Title: Re: Consonyms Post by towr on Oct 3rd, 2007, 6:34am A dictionary search gives 313; although I still have to weed out some things that don't really seem words. [edit] Good grief what a load of crap in that dictionary. I only recognize
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Title: Re: Consonyms Post by Barukh on Oct 3rd, 2007, 6:46am I was afraid the problem statement won't be precise! on 10/03/07 at 06:01:13, FiBsTeR wrote:
Not only that, every consonant must be used once and only once. Quote:
Isn't this the third form of the verb "tear"? As such, it's not allowed by the rule #3. |
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Title: Re: Consonyms Post by FiBsTeR on Oct 3rd, 2007, 7:20am "to tear" is the infinitive form of the verb, "tear" is the present first person, "tore" is the past, and "torn" is the adjective, as in "That piece of paper is torn." on 10/03/07 at 06:34:00, towr wrote:
How did you search a dictionary? Or did you mean you manually searched? |
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Title: Re: Consonyms Post by towr on Oct 3rd, 2007, 7:31am on 10/03/07 at 07:20:05, FiBsTeR wrote:
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Title: Re: Consonyms Post by rmsgrey on Oct 3rd, 2007, 11:53am What? No tureen? |
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Title: Re: Consonyms Post by towr on Oct 3rd, 2007, 11:56am on 10/03/07 at 11:53:40, rmsgrey wrote:
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Title: Re: Consonyms Post by Barukh on Oct 3rd, 2007, 11:59am Nice! ::) What about other combinations? For instance: S, P, T? |
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Title: Re: Consonyms Post by rmsgrey on Oct 3rd, 2007, 12:10pm on 10/03/07 at 11:56:02, towr wrote:
From www.dictionary.com: "a large, deep, covered dish for serving soup, stew, or other foods." |
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Title: Re: Consonyms Post by towr on Oct 3rd, 2007, 12:34pm on 10/03/07 at 11:59:46, Barukh wrote:
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Title: Re: Consonyms Post by FiBsTeR on Oct 3rd, 2007, 2:25pm on 10/03/07 at 06:46:03, Barukh wrote:
So words such as "tooth" have no consonyms, by your definition, since the consonant "t" is used twice? |
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Title: Re: Consonyms Post by Obob on Oct 3rd, 2007, 8:09pm Two words are consonyms if they use the same consonants, and those consonants appear the same number of times in each word. So "tooth" and "teeth" are consonyms, but "tooth" and "the" are not. I suppose you could look for triples with repeated consonants as well, (such as T T H), but I would be very surprised if a triple with repeated consonants generates the most consonyms. |
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