Author
Message
sauceykat
Decorated
Joined: 10 Jul 2003 Posts: 251 Location: BC>Canada
[PUZZLE: ILB.com] Poem Anagram Puzzles? OK, bare with me, this might be totally lame but I noticed the poems on ILB and was wondering if it's possible they could be anagrams? Sorta like Melody's poems? Sorry if this is posted somewhere else, but this board is insane with new posts right now, and they're all scattered
D-
Posted: Sat Jul 24, 2004 7:33 pm
drizjr
Unfictologist
Joined: 28 Nov 2003 Posts: 1700
Oh, these "Hive-Kus" ?
Quote:
Hive-Ku
Bee Kissed
Single clover flower.
Kissed by honeybee, it nods,
All agreeably.
Busy Hives
Tiger-eye buttons.
Sisters dancing figure-eights,
All together now!
Live Jewelry
On my shirt a broach,
Gentle sister do not sting,
Don't you know me now?
I assumed that they were part of Aunt M's original page, and sort of a wink and a smile to a previous ARG that used haikus . (Sorry, I wasn't around at that time to know which one it was.) But I'll take a closer look at 'em. Who knows...maybe they are what attracted her/it/them/whatever to ilovebees in the first place.
Posted: Sat Jul 24, 2004 8:02 pm
CorSorei
Veteran
Joined: 29 Jul 2004 Posts: 79 Location: EVERYWHERE AND NOWHERE
hy ku - a peom consisting of three lines following a pattern of 5/7/5 sylables in each line respectively.
The last two follow this pattern, however in the first "hive-ku" if you seperate it into sylables it looks like this, "sin-gle clo-ver flow-er". Now I don't know, but that looks like six sylables to me. Now this could mean something and it could not I don't know yet. I just thought I'd mention it in case no one else has. Maybe a better mind (or one less burned out than mine) can figure out.
Posted: Fri Jul 30, 2004 12:04 am
guest
Guest
ha Good find CorSorei.
Though I don't think it means much.
Dumb poet perhaps?
Posted: Fri Jul 30, 2004 12:16 am
CorSorei
Veteran
Joined: 29 Jul 2004 Posts: 79 Location: EVERYWHERE AND NOWHERE
Could be a dumb poet I guess. Or it could be someone who is really bad at site design/upkeep. Or it could mean something (probably not), but just maybe . I mean really, you have been running a site for 7 years and you didn't notice this, and no one pointed it out to you? Then again I've been reading this for the past couple of days and reading the Halo novels again. Before you ask, started reading before I found out about this whole life-sucking ordeal. I'm even starting to dream about this whole Halo universe, and I don't dream!
Posted: Fri Jul 30, 2004 2:20 am
devjoe
Boot
Joined: 24 Jul 2004 Posts: 21
Some people pronounce "flower" as one syllable.
See the M-W.com entry, which recognizes this pronunciation. Note that the parenthesized part of the pronunciation, including the syllable break, is optional.
Posted: Fri Jul 30, 2004 6:23 pm
aliendial
Unfictologist
Joined: 29 Sep 2002 Posts: 3438 Location: Far Far Away. Nowhere Near You. Really.
I think these haiku suffer from the same problem as our other big anagram -- so many letters that almost anything is possible. I would expect a useful anagram to be much shorter. Unless maybe you anagram each line independently?
Also just a note, we learned (to my surprise) in some earlier game that proper haiku are not only in 5-7-5 patterns. Don't recall exactly, but I think there are some other accepted patterns. It's just the 5-7-5 form is what we learn about in school.
_________________aliendial
Posted: Fri Jul 30, 2004 7:37 pm
CoffeeJedi
Unfictologist
Joined: 27 Jul 2004 Posts: 1327 Location: Charlotte NC, USA
5-7-5 is only relevant in the original Japanese, because English sentence structure is different, you can alter it slightly, as long as you keep the short-long-short pattern
_________________seeker > !seek canoe
!splotch
Posted: Fri Jul 30, 2004 7:59 pm
CorSorei
Veteran
Joined: 29 Jul 2004 Posts: 79 Location: EVERYWHERE AND NOWHERE
I'll grant that flower could be excepted as a single sylable, but my dictionary didn't show it as such. It did however show that "single" could be pronounced as a single sylable. What I did was take the sylable count from the version which seemed relavant.
"sin-gle; alone, unique, solitary, particular"
"clo-ver; any of a genus of leguminous herbs, usually with 3 leaves and dense flower"
"flow-er; a plant branch modified for seed production and bearing leaves specialized into floral organs"
source: The New Merriam-Webster Dictionary
So in a sense that first line could have 4 - 6 sylables depending on how you look at it. I just thought that it was unusual, that all. Thanks for the different view on the subject though, it much apperciated.
edit: According to the same source, a haiku is a japanese poem usually consisting of a 5/7/5 sylable pattern. I guess I should have checked that first. Thanks to those that pointed that out as well.
_________________Pay no attention to the man behind the curtain.
Posted: Fri Jul 30, 2004 8:22 pm
cpip
Veteran
Joined: 29 Jul 2004 Posts: 109 Location: KY
Okay, getting silly -- has anyone considered translating those BACK into Japanese?
Posted: Fri Jul 30, 2004 9:36 pm
Noir
Boot
Joined: 28 Jul 2004 Posts: 47
aliendial wrote:
I think these haiku suffer from the same problem as our other big anagram -- so many letters that almost anything is possible. I would expect a useful anagram to be much shorter. Unless maybe you anagram each line independently?
How about starting with the stand-out line indicated above?
Single Clover Flower should be entered into anagram programs, maybe even a ROT device.
Posted: Sat Jul 31, 2004 6:44 am
Kallelin
Boot
Joined: 29 Jul 2004 Posts: 16
Well... Statiscally, there's a huge amount of anagrams we can get from even that.
For just like, super-perfect anagrams I guess, preserving even the number of spaces, using only common words, there's this:
closing forever well
selling flower cover
covering flower sell
follows clever reign
clever follow singer
recover selling flow
clever flower losing
recover selling wolf
Follows clever reign caught my eye, but who knows what it could be. Then there're a few hundred anagrams that are four words. Or if we don't use common words... Well, there's a whole hell of a lot more threes, even.
I'll try to get anything good from the whole first Haiku if possible, but I don't know how good the software I'm running is.
Posted: Sat Jul 31, 2004 9:57 am
Kallelin
Boot
Joined: 29 Jul 2004 Posts: 16
This is gonna take forever. Twenty minutes and I'm at a tiny fraction of a percent. For those who wanna try it out, I got my programs here just now.
http://www.anagrammy.com/resources/generators.html
It seems like Anagram Artist (which is free) is workable if you mostly want to use your mind, and Anagram Genius (which has a free trial) would be good if you had a super rig and wanted it to do all the work. But it's gonna take a while.
Posted: Sat Jul 31, 2004 10:19 am
Cyphex
Boot
Joined: 27 Jul 2004 Posts: 12
Is there any info about these Hive-Ku's on the Wiki? I had a search but could not find anything.
If not, should'nt they be added as a possible unsolved puzzle?
Posted: Sat Jul 31, 2004 10:35 am
Kallelin
Boot
Joined: 29 Jul 2004 Posts: 16
I gotta tell you, from what I'm seeing there's like infinite numbers of anagrams no matter how you go about it- line by line or Haiku by Haiku. I could try them all at once, but by the time it was finished the damn thing would have metastasized.
I doesn't seem like we're gonna get anything going down this path. I think the original speculators were right to assume that this area was relatively uncorrupted.
Posted: Sat Jul 31, 2004 3:04 pm
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