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Although Your Story Was Nice The Beginning

The document discusses the concept of pangrams, sentences that contain every letter of the alphabet, and highlights the well-known example, 'the quick brown fox jumps over a lazy dog.' It notes common misquotes of this pangram and emphasizes the challenge of creating short pangrams with minimal letter repetition. Additionally, it suggests that longer, humorous, or eccentric pangrams are also noteworthy.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
21 views2 pages

Although Your Story Was Nice The Beginning

The document discusses the concept of pangrams, sentences that contain every letter of the alphabet, and highlights the well-known example, 'the quick brown fox jumps over a lazy dog.' It notes common misquotes of this pangram and emphasizes the challenge of creating short pangrams with minimal letter repetition. Additionally, it suggests that longer, humorous, or eccentric pangrams are also noteworthy.

Uploaded by

mr.0official826
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as DOCX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Although your story was nice the beginning,

middle and end did not flow together. Imagine


synchronized swimmers. They have a routine
which they follow. If one moves wrong they all
fail. This should help you out…………

A pangram is a sentence that contains all letter


of the alphabet. Less frequently. Such sentence
are called alphabetic sentence. Interesting
pangrams are generally short ones constructing
a sentence that includes the fewest repeat
letter possible is a challenging task. However,
pangram that are slightly longer yet
enlightening, humorous, or eccentric are
noteworthy in their own right. By far the most
well-known pangram is, “the quick brown fox
jump over a lazy dog.” Frequently this is the
sentence used to test out new typewriter,
presumably because it includes every letter of
the alphabet. Curiously, this sentence is often
misquoted by changing “jump” to “jumped.”
The past tense version , lacking an s, is nota
pangram. Often, too, it is misquoted as “the
lazy dog” rather then “a lazy dog.” This error is
not a grievous; the sentence remains a
pangram, just a slightly .

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