ZylonBane on 15/10/2004 at 16:06
If you switch around the first letters of "Gunther Hermann", then switch around the words themselves, you get a fair approximation of "German Hunter".
Groovy.
Navyhacker006 on 15/10/2004 at 17:44
Why not just say 'if you make an anagram of 'Gunther Hermann', you get a fair approximation of 'German Hunter' '?
Otherwise, interesting find.
On the subject of anagrams, found this earlier this week:
"To be or not to be: that is the question, whether tis nobler in the mind to suffer the slings and arrows of outrageous fortune."
can be anagrammed to form:
"In one of the Bard's best-thought-of tragedies, our insistent hero, Hamlet, queries on two fronts about how life turns rotten."
==Navyhacker006
ZylonBane on 15/10/2004 at 17:52
Because an anagram is any arbitrary rearrangement of all the letters in a word or phrase. This is simply transposing the first two letters.
Only reason I was even thinking about it is because Sluggy Freelance has a character named, "Nana Avarre".
Navyhacker006 on 15/10/2004 at 18:01
I see. I read "then switch around the words themselves" incorrectly.
==Navyhacker006
JKeats on 15/10/2004 at 21:21
Nana Avarre, the angsty dentist!
Jake on 16/10/2004 at 05:25
Quote Posted by ZylonBane
If you switch around the first letters of "Gunther Hermann", then switch around the words themselves, you get a fair approximation of "German Hunter".
Groovy.
When I do it, I get "Hermann Ugnther." Did I do something wrong?
Deiyen on 16/10/2004 at 09:18
"Gunther Hermann" is in quotes, which probably means you take the first letter of each word. "Hunther Germann"