View Full Version : whats wrong with this paragraph?
The_Radiation_Specialist
02-May-2006, 02:55 PM
How quickly can you find out what is unusual about this paragraph? It looks so ordinary that you would think that nothing was wrong with it at all, and in fact, nothing is. But it is unusual. Why? If you study it and think about it you may find out, but I am not going to assist you in any way. You must do it without coaching. No doubt if you work at it for long, it will dawn on you. I don't know. Now, go to work and try your luck.
Gruesome
02-May-2006, 03:02 PM
There are no E's??
The_Radiation_Specialist
02-May-2006, 03:07 PM
yes, x and z are also absent
swansont
02-May-2006, 07:04 PM
yes, x and z are also absent
But what's unusual about x and z being absent?
Titana
02-May-2006, 09:08 PM
Is it the paragraph or the title? The first letter in the title is not capitalized.
Other then that I can't find anything else......I think....:think:
Lord Jubjub
03-May-2006, 12:32 AM
Just try to do a paragraph without an assist from a most common symbol.
No apostrophe in the contraction "whats" in the title.
Roy Batty
03-May-2006, 01:48 AM
Just try to do a paragraph without an assist from a most common symbol.
Now what non consonant would that ba than?:think:
ggremlin
03-May-2006, 02:05 AM
A+ or A-?
HenrikOlsen
03-May-2006, 04:03 AM
No e's, caught in about 15 seconds.
Try this one, very much shortened from the original:
Poe, E.
Near a Raven
Midnights so dreary, tired and weary.
Silently pondering volumes extolling all by-now obsolete lore.
During my rather long nap - the weirdest tap!
An ominous vibrating sound disturbing my chamber's antedoor.
"This", I whispered quietly, "I ignore".
Perfectly, the intellect remembers: the ghostly fires, a glittering ember.
Inflamed by lightning's outbursts, windows cast penumbras upon this floor.
Sorrowful, as one mistreated, unhappy thoughts I heeded:
That inimitable lesson in elegance - Lenore -
Is delighting, exciting...nevermore.
Ominously, curtains parted (my serenity outsmarted),
And fear overcame my being - the fear of "forevermore".
Fearful foreboding abided, selfish sentiment confided,
As I said, "Methinks mysterious traveler knocks afore.
A man is visiting, of age threescore."
...
The whole thing's here (http://ibm.mtsac.edu/~sguth/raven.htm).
Jeff Root
03-May-2006, 08:31 AM
Got it before I finished reading the second sentence-- between
five and ten seconds, I think. What a dark and stormy paragraph.
-- Jeff, in Minneapolis
Mellow
04-May-2006, 11:03 AM
noe 'e's ditto, about ten seconds, but I'm not bragging since Clop's puzzle about the prison has me almost stumped.
Melusine
05-May-2006, 11:35 AM
"How I need a drink, alcoholic in nature, after the heavy lectures involving quantum mechanics."
This is evermore apt. :rolleyes:
If Lewis Carroll had not been a mathematician, I would agree only with the sentiment and not what's behind it.
Jeff Root
05-May-2006, 12:17 PM
"How I need a drink, alcoholic in nature, after the heavy lectures involving quantum mechanics."
I'm amazed at myself. I got this in about a minute. Piece of cake.
This is evermore apt.
I haven't figured out the significance of that comment, though.
-- Jeff, in Minneapolis
Melusine
05-May-2006, 01:05 PM
I'm amazed at myself. I got this in about a minute. Piece of cake.
Maybe you're the square root of something? :D
I haven't figured out the significance of that comment, though.
-- Jeff, in Minneapolis
I consider myself innumerate; I speak in tongues, so to speak. Good luck! ;)
Fram
05-May-2006, 01:14 PM
I have to admit that I didn't notice the missing e's, as I had already found "the" (in my view, at the time) solution: the unusual thing about that paragraph is that it is about itself (self-referential? Something like that). That doesn't happen very often... It would have been clearer (easier) if you had said something like" what's unusual about the next paragraph", and then giving such a one.
But it's not unusual to miss good solutions by finding a wrong solution. Sorry, I won't do it again.
Swift
08-May-2006, 10:30 PM
I have to admit that I didn't notice the missing e's, as I had already found "the" (in my view, at the time) solution: the unusual thing about that paragraph is that it is about itself (self-referential? Something like that). That doesn't happen very often... It would have been clearer (easier) if you had said something like" what's unusual about the next paragraph", and then giving such a one.
But it's not unusual to miss good solutions by finding a wrong solution. Sorry, I won't do it again.
I've been interested in self-referring sentences since reading an article about them in the Metamagical Themes column many years ago. I particularly like the ones that are paradoxes or errors, such as:
This sentence no verb.
This sentence is in Chinese when no one is reading it.
This sentence is in green.
Which question is also its own answer?
Kootenaistar
10-May-2006, 03:24 AM
Pardon me if I am too quick, but the last sentence is the only question, the only answer to itself, and the only one that I see as correct.
#1- the "word" verb is in the sentence
#2-the word "Chinese" is in the sentence, but the sentence is written in English and stays so unless translated.
#3-green? on my screen red print on blue background has nothing to do with green
#4 the only question asked (not false statement made) is the only answer to itself!
jack butler
14-May-2007, 10:56 PM
How quickly can you find out what is unusual about this paragraph? It looks so ordinary that you would think that nothing was wrong with it at all, and in fact, nothing is. But it is unusual. Why? If you study it and think about it you may find out, but I am not going to assist you in any way. You must do it without coaching. No doubt if you work at it for long, it will dawn on you. I don't know. Now, go to work and try your luck.
No e. 15 seconds.
tdvance
15-May-2007, 01:57 AM
Is "no" the answer to this question?
vBulletin® v3.8.3, Copyright ©2000-2009, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
LinkBacks Enabled by
vBSEO 3.0.0