Thursday 29 December 2016

Classic Palindromes A to H: Plus Giorgio's GOOFIER Variants

WORDPLAY post #20
CREATIVE WORDPLAY, based on "classic" palindromes.
EDITED: Giorgio Coniglio, March 2017.








































Tuesday 20 December 2016

A Review: Composing Your Own PALINDROMES

WORDPLAY post #19
CREATIVE WORDPLAY including ad hoc examples
PARODY COMPOSED: Giorgio Coniglio, March 2017.



















Classic Palindromes  



Here are the 40 or so palindromes used in the parody-song "Bob" by Weird Al Yankovic; 
these were presumably selected for inclusion in the song based on being short, easy to pronounce, and potentially rhymable.

We arranged them alphabetically for your convenience. The Youtube link for the song is found here.



A dog, a panic in a pagoda.
Ah, Satan sees Natasha.
A Toyota's a Toyota.
Do geese see God?
Do nine men interpret? Nine men I nod.
Go hang a salami, I'm a lasagna hog.
God! A red nugget! A fat egg under a dog!
I, man, am regal- a German am I.
If I had a hi-fi.
Lisa Bonet ate no basil.
Lonely Tylenol. 
Madam, I'm Adam.
Ma is as selfless as I am.
May a moody baby doom a yam?
"Naomi", I moan.
Never odd or even.
No devil lived on.
No lemons, no melon.
No 'x' in Nixon.
Not a banana baton.
Now I see bees I won.
Nurse I spy gypsies - run!
O Geronimo, no minor ego.
O, stone, be not so.
Oh no! Don Ho!
Oozy rat in a sanitary zoo.
Pa's a sap. 
Race fast safe car.
Rats live on no evil star.
Rise to vote, sir.
Senile felines.
Too bad I hid a boot.
Too hot to hoot.
UFO tofu.
Warsaw was raw.
Was it a car or a cat I saw?
We panic in a pew.
Won't lovers revolt now?

































Thursday 15 December 2016

Weekly Wordplay

WORDPLAY post #18
Periodic postings of palindromes, Scramble-Town Maps (creative cartography), binomial phrases, limericks, etc. 

SONGLINK: For those readers who like poetry set to music: You can find lots of singable limerick-medleys and other spoofs on our sister blog "SILLY SONGS and SATIRE", such as this recent post




HOT LINKS to collections of Classic/Goofy Palindromes #1,#2,#3

















Saturday 10 December 2016

Weekly Wordplay

WORDPLAY post #17
Periodic postings of palindromes, Scramble-Town Maps (creative cartography), binomial phrases, limericks, etc. 

SONGLINK: For those readers who like poetry set to music: You can find lots of singable limerick-medleys and other spoofs on our sister blog "SILLY SONGS and SATIRE", such as this recent post
























Monday 5 December 2016

Analysis of the 2016 American Election: The ROLE of ANAGRAMS

WORDPLAY post #16
CREATIVE CARTOGRAPHY and WORDPLAY
PARODY COMPOSED: Giorgio Coniglio, March 2016, revised February, 2017.
SONGLINK: On "Giorgio's Ukable Parodies", post #122, a parody-song "Election-Race Anagrams" deals with the distribution of anagrams based on the words R-E-P-U-B-L-I-C-A-N-S and D-E-M-O-C-R-A-T-S.
 As shown below, a non-biased assessment using an automatic anagram generator suggests that Republicans would have a yu-uge advantage over Democrats in a contest based on the number of anagrams; however, the generation of plausible anagrammatic locales incorporating postal codes is a more complex matter, and results in a tighter 'race' than would otherwise be expected. A conspiracy theorist might note that the word 'ruble' is embedded in the word "REPUBLICANS", but the editor does not wish to give any credence to such a possibility. There is however some relation between anagrams derived and party leanings, policy and support that is shown in the 2nd slide.
  This material was developed before the election of November 2016, with the initial hope that it might be helpful in predicting election results.  What do YOU think?