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Mar 16, 2016
This week’s themePlaying with words This week’s words rebus calligram ambigram pangram acrostic
Come-In / Go-Away
Photo: Amazon
A.Word.A.Day
with Anu Gargambigram
PRONUNCIATION:
MEANING:
noun:
A word or phrase written in a manner that it reads the same (sometimes,
a different word or phrase) when oriented in a different way, for example,
when reflected or rotated.
ETYMOLOGY:
From Latin ambi- (both) + -gram (something written). Earliest documented
use: 1985.
USAGE:
“Come In & Go Away Doormat. This fun and clever graphic uses an ambigram
to greet and dismiss your visiting guests: ‘come in’ on arrival ‘go away’
when leaving.” Wipe Your Feet in Style This Winter; The Kent and Sussex Courier (Tunbridge Wells, UK); Oct 4, 2013. “Toryn Green already had his first Fuel album commemorated with an ambigram tattoo -- in one direction it reads ‘angel’ and in the other direction it reads ‘devil’.” Sarah Henning; Driven to Succeed; Anchorage Daily News (Alaska); Dec 16, 2007. NOTES:
My name lends itself to an easy ambigram.
See a week of ambigrams in A.Word.A.Day, created by master ambigrammer John Langdon.
There are many websites that can generate ambigrams for you. What ambigrams
can you come up with? Share original and (not computer-generated) ambigrams
at words@wordsmith.org.
A THOUGHT FOR TODAY:
The means of defence against foreign danger have been always the
instruments of tyranny at home. -James Madison, fourth US president (16 Mar
1751-1836)
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