Sunday, July 27, 2008

Some BASIC RULES

What's in Your Names? Or Any Name?

What’s In YOUR Name?
THE BASIC RULES FOR LEXIGRAMMING AND ANAGRAMMING

1. When LEXIGRAMMING, use any and all letters from the source to create/find words when
Lexigramming.
Add none, remove none.


2. When Anagramming, use all the letters from the source by rearranging only to find/create words, with no letters left over.
Add none, remove none.

3. Do not add or remove any letters from the name or phrase etcetera before starting to Lexigram or Anagram it, nor afterwards. If you do remove any letters, be they consonants or vowels, your resulting Lexigram or Anagram will not be based on the Name etcetera you chose to divinate.
Adding letters to try and artificially & unethically FORCE a Lexigram to say things which are not in reality there.


The above rules are the "simplified basic rules".
More:

Simply put, a lexigram is a word or phrase made from words found within another word or phrase.

One begins with a source word (or phrase), ascertains other words that can be made by rearranging its letters; on a word to word basis, creating new words, and then composing a new phrase out of that list of words. The new phrase is the lexigram.

If one simply rearranges the total letters from the source, it is first an Anagram, because the letters in total are simply being rearranged.

A true anagram is always a simple form of a lexigram.

When anagramming, ALL the letters MUST be used by simply rearranging them to form words. There must not be any leftover letters from what is being anagrammed. That is a true anagram.

A lexigram is not always an anagram however. Only by being first a true anagram can it be both an anagram and a lexigram.

For more see:

Lexigrams: LEXIGRAMS & Anagrams LESSONS, RULES & DEFINTIONS