Thursday, October 6, 2011

Antigrams (with sources).

Antigrams (with sources). Antigrams are anagrams an��a��gram?n.1. A word or phrase formed by reordering the letters of another word or phrase, such as satin to stain.2. anagrams (used with a sing. whose two parts have opposite or contrastingmeanings. Here is a large gathering that Ove provided. Those without thepublished sources are from The Enigma (1920-) or The Eastern Enigma(1898-1920).Abominable--Bon, amiable--Yercas, Feb. 1928Antagonist--not against--Arcanus, cited in Dec. 1898The agriculturalists--are ill-taught rustics--Viking, Denver,"In the Realm of the Riddle,"B & O Magazine, Aug. 1931Adversaries--are advisers--Gi Gantic, June 1926Alencon--Non-lace--Hoho, Dec. 1967Algebra--A garble--Senor, Dec. 1979Anarchists--Arch-saints--Pearson, 1907? or Yercas, Jan. 1931A bandit--ain't bad--P.A. Bee, July 1928Boasting--It's no gab--Viking, April 1931Butchers--cut herbs--Sol, Jan. 1926Buckingham Palace--Ach! a bum place, King--Su San, June 1929A bundle--unbaled--Larry, Nov. 1952Commendation--Aim to condemn--Ralph, Oct. 1953Company Store--Compensatory--quoted in The Enigma, June 1925Conglutinate--Can't glue it on--Jack O' Lantern, July1927Conglutinate--Cannot glue it--Bebe, June 1932Customers--Store scum--Neophyte, Feb. 1977Defiant--Fainted--Pandora, "Complications," Jan. 27,1895Demoniacal--A docile man--Pygmalion (C. F. McCormick),Binghamton, NY, GoldenDays, Oct. 2, 1886Denmark--Dark men--The 20th Century Standard Puzzle Book, Vol.III, 1907Diplomacy--Mad policy--Sphinx, the Boston Sunday Herald This article is about the Scottish newspaper. For other uses see Sunday Herald (disambiguation)The Sunday Herald is an award winning Scottish Sunday newspaper launched on 7 February 1999. , Oct. 1,1893Dormitories--Tidier rooms--Sally, Oct. 1989Dynamited--A tidy mend--Castet, June 1952Eglantine--Inelegant--St. Nicholas, Oct. 1875Elections--No lies, etc.--The American Agriculturist, May1860Evangelists--Evil's agents--Hi Herr, June 1927Female impersonator--Rip! See? Not a male form--Ulk, March1991Filled--Ill-fed--Enavlicm, May 1930Handle with care--Hit hard, e'en claw!--Hart King, Aug.1994Henry Ward Beecher--We brand her cheery--Gemini(This antigram was listed as a mutation in the April 10, 1887issue of "Puzzle Calls." Adonis, the, editor of the column,wrote: "There is no apposite ap��po��site?adj.Strikingly appropriate and relevant. See Synonyms at relevant.[Latin appositus, past participle of app relation to the original, but ratheran opposite one.")Hibernians--Banish Erin--D.C. Ver, "The NewarkPuzzler," Sept. 8, 1906A homesteader--He roamed east--Fred Domino, Jan. 1961Home run hitter--I'm not Ruth here--Ab Struse, Aug. 1986Honorees--No heroes--an original, July 1992Horatio Nelson--O, honors at Nile--Gen. E. Norre, Alameda, CA,"Sphinxdom," The Eurekan, Nov. 1893Indomidable--I'm in bed a lot--Castet, March 1929Inroads--No raids--Viking, Oct. 1964Lemon--Melon--Chin-Chin, "Our Puzzle Column," The Wash.(Sunday) Post, Dec. 9, 1883Misfortune--It's more fun--Emeline (Mrs. Edward D. Peck),previously known as EmmaLine, Fairbury, NE, B & O Magazine, July 1925Nominate--I name not--Spud (Harland J. Murphy), Yazoo City Yazoo City,city (1990 pop. 12,427), seat of Yazoo co., W central Miss., on the Yazoo River; inc. 1830. It is a trade, processing, and industrial center in a cotton, cattle, and soybean area. Oil is refined, and clothing and fertilizer are manufactured. , MS, B& O Magazine, March 1924The parsonage--So pagan there--Hoho, Oct. 1960Point(s)--No tip(s)--Jemand, May 1924Prosperous--Poor purses--Osaple, March 1925Roosevelt--vote loser--Author uncertain; it was originally,"Theo. Roosevelt--O the vote loser," quoted in The Enigma,July 1912Somnolent--Not solemn--Gi Gantic, Dec. 1935Sweltering swel��ter��ing?adj.1. Oppressively hot and humid; sultry.2. Suffering from oppressive heat.swel heat--The winter gales--A. Chem, July 1967Thomas A. Edison--Tom has no ideas--Wrong Font (Robert G. Evans),Holland, MI, E, Jan. 1930Timberless--Trees, limbs--Larry, Nov. 1932Tophet--The top--Castet, July 1934Violent--Not evil--Spreggs, May 1951The Volstead law--had all "wet" votes--Larry, Feb.1927United States--detests a unit---Primrose, "MysticArgosy," June 21, 1902Womanish--How man is--Hoho, April 1962Dave Morice is featured in the December, 2009 issue of GAMESMagazine The term Games magazine could refer to: GAMES, an American magazine about general games GamesTM, a British video games magazine List of games magazines and . His article (on pages 6-11) "Ultrapoems andHypernovels" describes many of his poetic efforts using variousliterary constraints. Word Ways readers are strongly urged to pick up acopy of GAMES to remind themselves of the vast creativity of ourKickshaws editor. Jeremiah Farrell Jeremiah (Jerry) Farrell (b. 1937), is an American professor emeritus of mathematics at Butler University in Indiana. He is well-known for having designed Will Shortz's favorite puzzle, the 1996 "Election Day" crossword in the New York Times.

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