Re: Name Anagrams
in reply to a message by Jonathan Ng
Hi Jonathan,
I'm really not one of the anagrammers. The primary culprits are Pavlos/Pre-Nup (or whatever he's calling himself this week) and Nanaea. They may have more free time and more anagram software than the rest of us. Nan mentions a coupla sites in one of her most recent postings on here, if you're interested.
They also both speak Esperanto. Now that the English anagram names project is about put to bed, for God's sake don't encourage them further! An Esperanto anagram names list would constitute spam, in nearly anyone's book...
I'm really not one of the anagrammers. The primary culprits are Pavlos/Pre-Nup (or whatever he's calling himself this week) and Nanaea. They may have more free time and more anagram software than the rest of us. Nan mentions a coupla sites in one of her most recent postings on here, if you're interested.
They also both speak Esperanto. Now that the English anagram names project is about put to bed, for God's sake don't encourage them further! An Esperanto anagram names list would constitute spam, in nearly anyone's book...
Replies
Esperanto Anagram Project
Esperanto Anagram Project :
* A Greco-Roman apparent jest.
* Satan met proper jargon ace (i.e. the Nanaea and Priapos team)
Esperanto Anagram Project :
* A Greco-Roman apparent jest.
* Satan met proper jargon ace (i.e. the Nanaea and Priapos team)
Actually, I think we may just incorporate a few Esperanto names in the list anyway, as it's an extremely eclectic name list. I see that Priapos hasn't hesitated to include the Arabic name for "Satan" in the list -- "Shaitan" -- and make a lovely anagram out of it that's actually (and surprisingly) in common use today as a girl's name: "Tanisha". I wonder how many parents named their daughters "Tanisha", knowing that? ;)
-- Nanaea
-- Nanaea