* * * * *

                                   Cheating

Bunny and I just had a little contest to see who could do the Daily Jumble
[1] first—Bunny would do it normally, using her brain and a pen, and I would
“cheat” by using the computer. The jumble was:

> What the tourists paid to use a cell phone in Italy.
>
> THALC _ [_] _ [_] [_]
>
> SEGUS [_] _ [_] [_] _
>
> RETOAT [_] [_] _ [_] _ _
>
> MEINER _ [_] [_] _ [_] _
>
> [_] [_] [_] [_] [_]
>  [_] [_] [_] [_] [_] [_] [_]
>

So, did I have a Jumble solving program? Nope. Just the Unix command line,
used like this:

> GenericUnixPrompt> grep '^[thalc][thalc][thalc][thalc][thalc]$' /usr/dict/words
> catch
> hatch
> latch
> GenericUnitPrompt>
>

I then had to scan the output list (which isn't a very long list) to find the
word that actually matches. In this case, the word can't be “catch” because
there aren't two Cs, nor can it be “hatch” since there aren't two Hs, leaving
the first Jumble word as “latch.”

A couple of minutes, and I have all four words decoded. I then had to take a
call on my cell phone. Bunny was still working on word number three.

A few minutes for the conversation, and I start on the solution. By now,
Bunny had guessed half the answer, and was working to figure out the last
Jumble word (which is “ermine”). I was working to get the final solution,
with twelve letters, split between two words, it wasn't easy. A list of five
letter words that can be made from the twelve letters of the solution was too
large to scan. So was the list of seven letter words. I bogged down, and
Bunny was able to pull in the final answer and win.

Just goes to show you that even when “cheating,” you might not always win
(now, had I searched the dictionary list for words starting in a capital
letter, I might have won, but that thought didn't occur to me).

[1] http://www.jumble.com/

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