[seqfan] Re: Integers which are anagrams of other integers -- in English

Jonathan Post jvospost3 at gmail.com
Wed Jul 21 23:38:51 CEST 2010


... modulo a clear definition of "non-trivial" which presumably
involves word-boundaries.

On Wed, Jul 21, 2010 at 2:22 PM, Andrew Weimholt
<andrew.weimholt at gmail.com> wrote:
> ONE HUNDRED TWO <-> TWO HUNDRED ONE
> ONE HUNDRED THREE <-> THREE HUNDRED ONE
> ...
> So far, these all seem trivial - we're just exchaning words
> (or suffixes in the case of "TY").
>
> ONE HUNDRED TWELVE <-> TWO HUNDRED ELEVEN
> looks like the first non-trivial one.
>
> Andrew
>
> On 7/21/10, Eric Angelini <Eric.Angelini at kntv.be> wrote:
>>
>>  Hello SeqFans,
>>
>>  ... the above described seq may exist already -- but I cannot find it.
>>  It begins (not sure) with:
>>
>>  67, 69, 76, 96,...
>>
>>  SIXTY-SEVEN <-> SEVENTY-SIX
>>  SIXTY-NINE <-> NINETY-SIX
>>  SEVENTY-SIX <-> SIXTY-SEVEN
>>  NINETY-SIX <-> NINETY-SIX
>>  ...
>>
>>  Best,
>>  É.
>>
>>
>>
>>
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>>
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>>
>
>
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