Create Backronyms With Google Code Search

Create Backronyms With Google Code Search

Luke Metcalfe writes about how, since Google Code Search allows regular expressions, you can type a string and find out if it can be used as an acronym.

I can’t explain the search string required, but you need something like \s+N\w+\s+A\w+\s+T\w+\s+H\w+\s+A\w+\s+N\w+, and Code Search will find a word sequence that matches the letter sequence, assuming one exists in their index.

Philipp has made your job easier, by providing a search box you can type any word into, to get the results from Google, without any hard thinking.

Here are some:

  • joe – just one example / jumble of extra
  • fish – found if space has / For info see http
  • carl – Clear any remaining live / create and remove lists
  • coke – cache of known existence
  • soda – styles of data access / Size of data actually / specified or defaulted attributes / select or delete all / shred of documentation about / start of desired area / standard options described above
  • cola – count of locks against / consists of lines appearing / couple of lines ago / conditions or license agreements
  • crap – computational resources and placing / carriage return and percent / command reports all people / can represent any possible
  • dude – data using Data Encryption / Digital Unix default echo
  • god – granting or denying / grows on demand / get old data / groups of directives / global operator delete / get our data / generates output data / gigabytes of data / group of documents / group of developers
  • mom – most other machines / meaningful on MacOS / major or minor / minimum or maximum / missing or magic / matches our message / miss our man

Pretty cool. The “god” one is my favorite.

Word of the day: These are “backronyms”, words that start as acronyms that you find a set of words for.

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Nathan Weinberg writes the popular InsideGoogle blog, offering the latest news and insights about Google and search engines.

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