I was doodling on the back of the sermon program foldout.
I noticed that GOD became DOG by simply rearranging the letters. I did not know it at the time, but I had at that moment discovered Anagrams for myself!
Fascinated I then began "playing" with the name:
"GOD".
GO GOD GO!
GO DOG GO!
GO OG GO!
I was laughing myself silly and got slapped for it. LOL!
However in that moment of a wordy/letter eureka,
I was addicted to Lexigramming!
I continued looking....
JESUS....has the word US in it!
Later whilst visiting my Great Grandmother; my parents told her about my "playing" with the letters found in names and words. By that time I had already Lexigrammed the names of my parents and siblings.
Great Grandma was utterly thrilled!♥ ♥ ♥
She brought out of the attic old antique "ANAGRAM" game boards, and Scrabble game, and helped me take my interest in Lexigramming to a higher level.
I drove teachers bonkers because in school I would be doing Lexigramming rather than paying attention in classes. Oops! LOL!
By time I was 7 years old in 1961 (and a sickly child, with poor eyesight...plenty of time to Lexigram) I was dreaming them, creating them in my dreams! I usually did and still have
paper and pencil, or pen nearby to jot down my Lexigrams that come in dreams.
♥ ♥ ♥ ERROR FREE LEXIGRAMMING IS MY SERIOUS PASSION!♥ ♥ ♥
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Everyone is a teacher...
Everyone is a student...
Learning is eternal.
}><}}(*>
More about me.
(see my profile page for more)
I didn't even know about Star Signs, or Linda's interest in them until I acquired a computer, got internet access, and joined a forum in March of 2005.
Thats right folks!
I was then a total computer newbie, who had just gotten a computer, and it was my first time on the internet also in that March of 2005!
Then when some folks there saw my Lexigrams they began accusing me of using generators!
I was like..
"huh? What is a generator?"
I'd been Lexigramming nearly 45 years to date, by that time, without having ever been on a computer let alone using a computer program to Lexigram!
Even since having had a few strokes, which have affected my concentration, and vision acuity, I still do them by hand, using my mind and yes, old hard copy real printed on paper bound dictionaries and thesauri; and only consult a generated list if I want to find words that are uncommon/archaic, and or not in my personal mental vocabulary.
I still dream them, and write down phrases which come to me in dreams, on a note pad always kept by my bed.
I keep note pads in the bathroom to spontaneously write down Lexigram phrases as they come to me and use tape recorders also.
I really need to get myself a digital recorder so that when my eyes are wonky, or in dark whilst in bed, I can still note the Lexigram phrases that come to me.
lexis
Greek for "word"
rede
Pronunciation: \ˈrēd\
Function: transitive verb
Etymology: Middle English
Date: before 12th century
1. archaic : to give counsel to : advise
2 archaic : interpret, explain
lexis+rede=
Lexis Rede
What is a Lexis♥Rede?
This is an in depth analysis/report of the words found within a name, date, or any phrase, and how each word and themes, or theme clusters, such as places, names, dates, time related terms, plants, animals, deities, mythology terms, astrology terms, spiritual, religious, and many more, relate to your name, or whatever title, or phrase is the Lexigram "source".
IT IS NOT AN ACTUAL LEXIGRAM!
NOR IT IT AN "IMPERFECT LEXIGRAM"
When speaking of an "Imperfect Lexigram" one uses the word "imperfect" in the same way as when it is used to describe an "Imperfect Anagram".
When one adds any letters which cannot be found within the word, name, or phase one is Lexigramming or Anagramming, the term "Imperfect" is employed as a description.
Imperfect Lexigramming is what most folks do, per Linda's rules, and her own inperfect Lexigrams.
Technically, there is no such thing as either and imperfect Lexigram and an imperfect Anagram, which by virtue of their having errors/imperfections, are not either a Lexigram nor an Anagram. Exceptions are with Anagrams which do not add letters not found in the source being anagrammed, but simply expanding beyond the constraints of only rearranging the letters perfectly, thus making the resulting creation stop being an angram and transforming it into a Lexigram.
Remember too:
AN ANAGRAM IS ALSO A LEXIGRAM.
A LEXIGRAM IS NOT AN ANAGRAM UNLESS IT IS FIRST A STANDARD ANAGRAM.
quote:
The creation of anagrams assumes an alphabet, the symbols of which are to be permuted. In a perfect anagram, every letter must be used, with exactly the same number of occurrences as in the anagrammed word or phrase; any result that falls short is called an imperfect anagram. Diacritics are usually disregarded (this is usually not relevant for English anagrams), and standard orthography is to be used.
Anagram
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Everyone is a teacher...
Everyone is a student...
Learning is eternal.
}><}}(*>

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