Definition of anagrammatize in English:
anagrammatize
(British anagrammatise)
verbˌanəˈɡramətʌɪzˌænəˈɡræmətaɪz
[with object]Make an anagram of (a word, phrase, or name).
将(词、短语或名称)变成变位词,回文构词
Example sentencesExamples
- Blackwall and Hornchurch stations couldn't be properly anagrammatized and instead they were split into their component words and reversed to produce ‘Wall Black’ and ‘Church Horn’ respectively.
- I looked for ‘available letters (not words)’ with which to anagrammatize them, and - eureka! - found in each of the fourteen lines letters which spell ‘horse’!
- As they danced, some held aloft giant letters that spelt ‘VOTE’, though poor choreography had managed to anagrammatise the rest of the message.
Derivatives
noun
In the happy crush of mail entries to this contest, we received lots and lots of movies comically altered by anagrammatization.
My wondering about it led me to the belief that it was an anagrammatization.
Example sentencesExamples
- These are two very different individuals separated by more than mere anagrammatisation .
- One of the things I sent along was a line-by-line anagrammatization of Sylvia Plath's poem ‘Ariel,’ which you can read here.
- The word base was filtered by me for words below 6 as these smaller words become so easy to find that any deliberate anagrammatisation would be hard to see.
- In the happy crush of mail entries to this contest, we received lots and lots of movies comically altered by anagrammatization .
- My wondering about it led me to the belief that it was an anagrammatization .
Rhymes
epigrammatize, melodramatize, overdramatize
Definition of anagrammatize in US English:
anagrammatize
(British anagrammatise)
verbˌanəˈɡramətīzˌænəˈɡræmətaɪz
[with object]Make an anagram of (a word, phrase, or name).
将(词、短语或名称)变成变位词,回文构词
Example sentencesExamples
- I looked for ‘available letters (not words)’ with which to anagrammatize them, and - eureka! - found in each of the fourteen lines letters which spell ‘horse’!
- Blackwall and Hornchurch stations couldn't be properly anagrammatized and instead they were split into their component words and reversed to produce ‘Wall Black’ and ‘Church Horn’ respectively.
- As they danced, some held aloft giant letters that spelt ‘VOTE’, though poor choreography had managed to anagrammatise the rest of the message.