Fully-Firstable Anagram Sets Announcing the arrival of Valued Associate #679: Cesar Manara Planned maintenance scheduled April 23, 2019 at 23:30 UTC (7:30pm US/Eastern)Anagram holidayA Fine Chain of AcronymsWord sets with no repeating lettersAnagram chains - What is the common property in each?A 3 letter word whose permutations are wordsAnagram SentencesScience OppogramsAnagram word searchWords that are anagrams of themselvesWord list: 2 consonants 2 vowelsUnusual letter combinations 2

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Fully-Firstable Anagram Sets



Announcing the arrival of Valued Associate #679: Cesar Manara
Planned maintenance scheduled April 23, 2019 at 23:30 UTC (7:30pm US/Eastern)Anagram holidayA Fine Chain of AcronymsWord sets with no repeating lettersAnagram chains - What is the common property in each?A 3 letter word whose permutations are wordsAnagram SentencesScience OppogramsAnagram word searchWords that are anagrams of themselvesWord list: 2 consonants 2 vowelsUnusual letter combinations 2










15












$begingroup$


Okay, first let's define some terminology:



  • Anagram - Oh come on, how are you on Puzzling.SE if you don't know this one?

  • Anagram Set - a list of words that are all anagrams of eachother, e.g.:

    • ACTS

    • CAST

    • CATS

    • SCAT


  • Fully-Firstable - An anagram set where each of the letters can be found at the beginning of at least one of the words. The previous example would not qualify because there is no word starting with 'T'. One example would be:

    • OPTS

    • POST or POTS

    • SPOT or STOP

    • TOPS


I have been able to find a relatively small number of these. One optional rule I will allow to increase the chances of finding more is that if a set contains more than one of the same letter, you only need to have one word which starts with that letter, e.g. the set:



  • EEL

  • LEE

Only needs 2 words to qualify since there are only 2 unique letters.



I can easily find a number of 3- and 4-letter sets, but I am aware of only two 5-letter sets with this property, one of which uses the letter-doubling rule and one which does not. Can you find them? Are there more? Are there any with 6 or more letters?



Oh, let's disallow some things: No proper nouns or acronyms (unless these acronyms have since become commonly used as standard words such as "laser" or "scuba"), no splitting the letters into 2 or more words, stick to English please - my examples are relatively common words, but if you come up with any that use questionable or archaic words you might want to back them up with a reputable dictionary link. Also, screams, laughs, or other sound effects are not words. I'm looking at you, "AAAAAA" or "AHAHAH / HAHAHA". These are trivial to come up with and thus disqualified.



Scoring



Since the original intended answers have both been found, the search is on for longer sets! The set with the most letters will take the checkmark - in the event of a tie, the set that relies the least on letter-doubling will win.










share|improve this question











$endgroup$











  • $begingroup$
    ahh my brain read it as "Fistable" and I was so confused for a couple moments.
    $endgroup$
    – Sensoray
    Apr 4 at 14:19










  • $begingroup$
    Yeah, couldn't think of a better word for it, so made my own...
    $endgroup$
    – Darrel Hoffman
    Apr 4 at 14:25















15












$begingroup$


Okay, first let's define some terminology:



  • Anagram - Oh come on, how are you on Puzzling.SE if you don't know this one?

  • Anagram Set - a list of words that are all anagrams of eachother, e.g.:

    • ACTS

    • CAST

    • CATS

    • SCAT


  • Fully-Firstable - An anagram set where each of the letters can be found at the beginning of at least one of the words. The previous example would not qualify because there is no word starting with 'T'. One example would be:

    • OPTS

    • POST or POTS

    • SPOT or STOP

    • TOPS


I have been able to find a relatively small number of these. One optional rule I will allow to increase the chances of finding more is that if a set contains more than one of the same letter, you only need to have one word which starts with that letter, e.g. the set:



  • EEL

  • LEE

Only needs 2 words to qualify since there are only 2 unique letters.



I can easily find a number of 3- and 4-letter sets, but I am aware of only two 5-letter sets with this property, one of which uses the letter-doubling rule and one which does not. Can you find them? Are there more? Are there any with 6 or more letters?



Oh, let's disallow some things: No proper nouns or acronyms (unless these acronyms have since become commonly used as standard words such as "laser" or "scuba"), no splitting the letters into 2 or more words, stick to English please - my examples are relatively common words, but if you come up with any that use questionable or archaic words you might want to back them up with a reputable dictionary link. Also, screams, laughs, or other sound effects are not words. I'm looking at you, "AAAAAA" or "AHAHAH / HAHAHA". These are trivial to come up with and thus disqualified.



Scoring



Since the original intended answers have both been found, the search is on for longer sets! The set with the most letters will take the checkmark - in the event of a tie, the set that relies the least on letter-doubling will win.










share|improve this question











$endgroup$











  • $begingroup$
    ahh my brain read it as "Fistable" and I was so confused for a couple moments.
    $endgroup$
    – Sensoray
    Apr 4 at 14:19










  • $begingroup$
    Yeah, couldn't think of a better word for it, so made my own...
    $endgroup$
    – Darrel Hoffman
    Apr 4 at 14:25













15












15








15


2



$begingroup$


Okay, first let's define some terminology:



  • Anagram - Oh come on, how are you on Puzzling.SE if you don't know this one?

  • Anagram Set - a list of words that are all anagrams of eachother, e.g.:

    • ACTS

    • CAST

    • CATS

    • SCAT


  • Fully-Firstable - An anagram set where each of the letters can be found at the beginning of at least one of the words. The previous example would not qualify because there is no word starting with 'T'. One example would be:

    • OPTS

    • POST or POTS

    • SPOT or STOP

    • TOPS


I have been able to find a relatively small number of these. One optional rule I will allow to increase the chances of finding more is that if a set contains more than one of the same letter, you only need to have one word which starts with that letter, e.g. the set:



  • EEL

  • LEE

Only needs 2 words to qualify since there are only 2 unique letters.



I can easily find a number of 3- and 4-letter sets, but I am aware of only two 5-letter sets with this property, one of which uses the letter-doubling rule and one which does not. Can you find them? Are there more? Are there any with 6 or more letters?



Oh, let's disallow some things: No proper nouns or acronyms (unless these acronyms have since become commonly used as standard words such as "laser" or "scuba"), no splitting the letters into 2 or more words, stick to English please - my examples are relatively common words, but if you come up with any that use questionable or archaic words you might want to back them up with a reputable dictionary link. Also, screams, laughs, or other sound effects are not words. I'm looking at you, "AAAAAA" or "AHAHAH / HAHAHA". These are trivial to come up with and thus disqualified.



Scoring



Since the original intended answers have both been found, the search is on for longer sets! The set with the most letters will take the checkmark - in the event of a tie, the set that relies the least on letter-doubling will win.










share|improve this question











$endgroup$




Okay, first let's define some terminology:



  • Anagram - Oh come on, how are you on Puzzling.SE if you don't know this one?

  • Anagram Set - a list of words that are all anagrams of eachother, e.g.:

    • ACTS

    • CAST

    • CATS

    • SCAT


  • Fully-Firstable - An anagram set where each of the letters can be found at the beginning of at least one of the words. The previous example would not qualify because there is no word starting with 'T'. One example would be:

    • OPTS

    • POST or POTS

    • SPOT or STOP

    • TOPS


I have been able to find a relatively small number of these. One optional rule I will allow to increase the chances of finding more is that if a set contains more than one of the same letter, you only need to have one word which starts with that letter, e.g. the set:



  • EEL

  • LEE

Only needs 2 words to qualify since there are only 2 unique letters.



I can easily find a number of 3- and 4-letter sets, but I am aware of only two 5-letter sets with this property, one of which uses the letter-doubling rule and one which does not. Can you find them? Are there more? Are there any with 6 or more letters?



Oh, let's disallow some things: No proper nouns or acronyms (unless these acronyms have since become commonly used as standard words such as "laser" or "scuba"), no splitting the letters into 2 or more words, stick to English please - my examples are relatively common words, but if you come up with any that use questionable or archaic words you might want to back them up with a reputable dictionary link. Also, screams, laughs, or other sound effects are not words. I'm looking at you, "AAAAAA" or "AHAHAH / HAHAHA". These are trivial to come up with and thus disqualified.



Scoring



Since the original intended answers have both been found, the search is on for longer sets! The set with the most letters will take the checkmark - in the event of a tie, the set that relies the least on letter-doubling will win.







word wordplay no-computers anagram






share|improve this question















share|improve this question













share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited Apr 4 at 12:56







Darrel Hoffman

















asked Apr 4 at 4:08









Darrel HoffmanDarrel Hoffman

2,1611023




2,1611023











  • $begingroup$
    ahh my brain read it as "Fistable" and I was so confused for a couple moments.
    $endgroup$
    – Sensoray
    Apr 4 at 14:19










  • $begingroup$
    Yeah, couldn't think of a better word for it, so made my own...
    $endgroup$
    – Darrel Hoffman
    Apr 4 at 14:25
















  • $begingroup$
    ahh my brain read it as "Fistable" and I was so confused for a couple moments.
    $endgroup$
    – Sensoray
    Apr 4 at 14:19










  • $begingroup$
    Yeah, couldn't think of a better word for it, so made my own...
    $endgroup$
    – Darrel Hoffman
    Apr 4 at 14:25















$begingroup$
ahh my brain read it as "Fistable" and I was so confused for a couple moments.
$endgroup$
– Sensoray
Apr 4 at 14:19




$begingroup$
ahh my brain read it as "Fistable" and I was so confused for a couple moments.
$endgroup$
– Sensoray
Apr 4 at 14:19












$begingroup$
Yeah, couldn't think of a better word for it, so made my own...
$endgroup$
– Darrel Hoffman
Apr 4 at 14:25




$begingroup$
Yeah, couldn't think of a better word for it, so made my own...
$endgroup$
– Darrel Hoffman
Apr 4 at 14:25










6 Answers
6






active

oldest

votes


















21












$begingroup$

Didn't know this stack community existed, found it by chance when this thread came up in my feed, and I do love puzzles so I'm joining. Taking a shot at this one with this entry, one of my words is considered colloquial or obsolete though.




Enters

Ernest (For the second E - Obsolete variant of Earnest)

Nester

Resent

Streen / Strene (Obsolete variant of Strain)

Tenser







share|improve this answer











$endgroup$








  • 1




    $begingroup$
    nice first answer, welcome here! +1 in respect :)
    $endgroup$
    – Omega Krypton
    Apr 4 at 14:23











  • $begingroup$
    Welcome to puzzling! You formatted it mostly right, just need to put 4 spaces at the end of each line to make the new one appear on a new line.
    $endgroup$
    – Sensoray
    Apr 4 at 14:24










  • $begingroup$
    Thanks @Sensoray - I was wondering what I was doing wrong there with the spoiler format, never used it before.
    $endgroup$
    – tremor
    Apr 4 at 14:25










  • $begingroup$
    Great job! It's nice have have great new users!
    $endgroup$
    – North
    Apr 4 at 14:36






  • 2




    $begingroup$
    @Sensoray TWO spaces, not four. :) Welcome tremor and congrats on the checkmark!
    $endgroup$
    – Rubio
    Apr 4 at 19:47


















8












$begingroup$

I found the same one as @Omega Krypton did (first time I got answer sniped, darn!), but I also found a possible letter doubling solution:




ESTER
RESET
STEER
TREES




and a couple of questionable ones:




EWERS
RESEW
SEWER
WERES (fantasy term for people who can transform into other beings; doesn’t appear in OED, Merriam-Webster, or Dictionary.com unfortunately)

EASTS
SEATS
ASSET
TASES (uses a taser on someone; doesn’t appear in OED but does on MW and Dictionary.com)







share|improve this answer









$endgroup$












  • $begingroup$
    For weres: en.wiktionary.org/wiki/weres?
    $endgroup$
    – Omega Krypton
    Apr 4 at 12:00










  • $begingroup$
    Your first one is my intended letter-doubling solution. (It could also include rot13(GREFR)). Your other ones are indeed questionable, but you can have the checkmark - @OmegaKrypton has the other answer I was looking for, but found it with a computer, so this one wins for now - unless somebody can find a 6+ set...
    $endgroup$
    – Darrel Hoffman
    Apr 4 at 12:38










  • $begingroup$
    Thanks so much for your inspiration for the 6+ set!
    $endgroup$
    – Omega Krypton
    Apr 4 at 12:45










  • $begingroup$
    and sorry for taking away your check, a +1 for you in respect!
    $endgroup$
    – Omega Krypton
    Apr 4 at 12:54



















7












$begingroup$

6 words (with doubling) (self-generated) (thanks @PiIsNot3 for inspiration)





esters
resets
steers
treses



5 words (Confession: with computer)





emits
mites
items
times
smite






share|improve this answer











$endgroup$












  • $begingroup$
    This is one of the sets I was looking for. @PilsNot3 found the other one, afraid I'll have to give them the checkmark since you used a computer, but take a +1 anyhow.
    $endgroup$
    – Darrel Hoffman
    Apr 4 at 12:39






  • 1




    $begingroup$
    Hmm, a bit obscure on that last one, but I guess I can allow it - in the interests of tie-breaking though, those requiring the fewest letter-doublings will take precedence. (e.g. if someone finds a 6-letter with only 1 or no doubles, it would beat this one. A 7-letter or more would beat either, etc.)
    $endgroup$
    – Darrel Hoffman
    Apr 4 at 12:53










  • $begingroup$
    Got it, thanks for the check!
    $endgroup$
    – Omega Krypton
    Apr 4 at 12:53











  • $begingroup$
    @DarrelHoffman please give the check to tremor with one less dupe, thanks:)
    $endgroup$
    – Omega Krypton
    Apr 4 at 14:28


















5












$begingroup$

I think I've found another one




argon
groan
nagor
organ
rogan (as in rogan josh)







share|improve this answer









$endgroup$












  • $begingroup$
    I can accept your 3rd word, but the 5th one I'm pretty sure is a proper noun...
    $endgroup$
    – Darrel Hoffman
    Apr 4 at 12:34


















5












$begingroup$

Shamelessly taken from @Tom’s question and @Soltius’ answer is this one (did you collaborate)??




Aretes

Eaters

Reseat

Seater

Teaser







share|improve this answer









$endgroup$












  • $begingroup$
    I don't think I've seen the question you're referring to, so no, no collaboration. I feel like your first word might be considered either a proper noun or a foreign word? Seems to be consistently either capitalized or italicized in that article...
    $endgroup$
    – Darrel Hoffman
    Apr 4 at 14:23










  • $begingroup$
    @DarrelHoffman It's in SOWPODS and other Scrabble dictionaries, but seems to be there for its other meaning of mountain ridges, which would normally be written with an accent. (See scrabble.hasbro.com/en-us/tools#dictionary .)
    $endgroup$
    – Especially Lime
    Apr 4 at 14:31










  • $begingroup$
    @DarrelHoffman please click the link/word for the English usage — plus I believe I got this answer with the same number of doubled letters before the currently accepted answer. It doesn’t appear, from the Wikipedia article, that it is a proper noun either.
    $endgroup$
    – El-Guest
    Apr 4 at 17:12











  • $begingroup$
    This is why I wish we were allowed more than one check-marked answer - we've also got a new contender that managed 6 letters with no doubling, though the words grow increasingly obscure. Not quite sure where to draw the line...
    $endgroup$
    – Darrel Hoffman
    Apr 4 at 17:55


















3












$begingroup$

For these kinds of questions where "Scrabble dictionary rules" always top out at 5 or 6 characters, I always wish we would allow "crossword dictionary rules." For example:



(6 letters, all kinds of cheats)




ANOLES /
NO SALE /
ON SALE /
LANOSE /
E-LOANS /
SLOANE




(6 letters, 20% proper nouns)




ENTERS /
NESTER /
TENSER /
RESENT /
STERNE




(5 letters, 40% cheats)




APRES /
PEARS /
EARPS /
REAPS /
SPARE




(6 letters, 80% proper nouns)




EISNER /
IRENES /
SERINE /
NEREIS /
RIESEN




To justify my posting as an answer, here's one with some uncommon words that hasn't been listed yet. (6 letters, no cheats)




ALERTS /
LASTER /
ESTRAL /
RATELS /
TALERS /
STALER







share|improve this answer









$endgroup$












  • $begingroup$
    I don't know, judges? That last one looks plausible, (though the others are clearly bending the rules a bit).
    $endgroup$
    – Darrel Hoffman
    Apr 4 at 18:01










  • $begingroup$
    @DarrelHoffman Talers, the link says Thalers. And that Taler became an alternate german word, but it did not affect the english spelling. So it doesn't quite count. Good try though!!!
    $endgroup$
    – Sensoray
    Apr 4 at 20:08










  • $begingroup$
    @Sensoray: "Taler" is a Scrabble-accepted historical variant of "Thaler" — as is, for that matter, "Dollar"! en.wiktionary.org/wiki/taler#Etymology_2 I just figured the Wikipedia link would be most relevant to the casual what's-thatter.
    $endgroup$
    – Quuxplusone
    Apr 4 at 22:12











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6 Answers
6






active

oldest

votes








6 Answers
6






active

oldest

votes









active

oldest

votes






active

oldest

votes









21












$begingroup$

Didn't know this stack community existed, found it by chance when this thread came up in my feed, and I do love puzzles so I'm joining. Taking a shot at this one with this entry, one of my words is considered colloquial or obsolete though.




Enters

Ernest (For the second E - Obsolete variant of Earnest)

Nester

Resent

Streen / Strene (Obsolete variant of Strain)

Tenser







share|improve this answer











$endgroup$








  • 1




    $begingroup$
    nice first answer, welcome here! +1 in respect :)
    $endgroup$
    – Omega Krypton
    Apr 4 at 14:23











  • $begingroup$
    Welcome to puzzling! You formatted it mostly right, just need to put 4 spaces at the end of each line to make the new one appear on a new line.
    $endgroup$
    – Sensoray
    Apr 4 at 14:24










  • $begingroup$
    Thanks @Sensoray - I was wondering what I was doing wrong there with the spoiler format, never used it before.
    $endgroup$
    – tremor
    Apr 4 at 14:25










  • $begingroup$
    Great job! It's nice have have great new users!
    $endgroup$
    – North
    Apr 4 at 14:36






  • 2




    $begingroup$
    @Sensoray TWO spaces, not four. :) Welcome tremor and congrats on the checkmark!
    $endgroup$
    – Rubio
    Apr 4 at 19:47















21












$begingroup$

Didn't know this stack community existed, found it by chance when this thread came up in my feed, and I do love puzzles so I'm joining. Taking a shot at this one with this entry, one of my words is considered colloquial or obsolete though.




Enters

Ernest (For the second E - Obsolete variant of Earnest)

Nester

Resent

Streen / Strene (Obsolete variant of Strain)

Tenser







share|improve this answer











$endgroup$








  • 1




    $begingroup$
    nice first answer, welcome here! +1 in respect :)
    $endgroup$
    – Omega Krypton
    Apr 4 at 14:23











  • $begingroup$
    Welcome to puzzling! You formatted it mostly right, just need to put 4 spaces at the end of each line to make the new one appear on a new line.
    $endgroup$
    – Sensoray
    Apr 4 at 14:24










  • $begingroup$
    Thanks @Sensoray - I was wondering what I was doing wrong there with the spoiler format, never used it before.
    $endgroup$
    – tremor
    Apr 4 at 14:25










  • $begingroup$
    Great job! It's nice have have great new users!
    $endgroup$
    – North
    Apr 4 at 14:36






  • 2




    $begingroup$
    @Sensoray TWO spaces, not four. :) Welcome tremor and congrats on the checkmark!
    $endgroup$
    – Rubio
    Apr 4 at 19:47













21












21








21





$begingroup$

Didn't know this stack community existed, found it by chance when this thread came up in my feed, and I do love puzzles so I'm joining. Taking a shot at this one with this entry, one of my words is considered colloquial or obsolete though.




Enters

Ernest (For the second E - Obsolete variant of Earnest)

Nester

Resent

Streen / Strene (Obsolete variant of Strain)

Tenser







share|improve this answer











$endgroup$



Didn't know this stack community existed, found it by chance when this thread came up in my feed, and I do love puzzles so I'm joining. Taking a shot at this one with this entry, one of my words is considered colloquial or obsolete though.




Enters

Ernest (For the second E - Obsolete variant of Earnest)

Nester

Resent

Streen / Strene (Obsolete variant of Strain)

Tenser








share|improve this answer














share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer








edited Apr 5 at 4:08

























answered Apr 4 at 14:19









tremortremor

3537




3537







  • 1




    $begingroup$
    nice first answer, welcome here! +1 in respect :)
    $endgroup$
    – Omega Krypton
    Apr 4 at 14:23











  • $begingroup$
    Welcome to puzzling! You formatted it mostly right, just need to put 4 spaces at the end of each line to make the new one appear on a new line.
    $endgroup$
    – Sensoray
    Apr 4 at 14:24










  • $begingroup$
    Thanks @Sensoray - I was wondering what I was doing wrong there with the spoiler format, never used it before.
    $endgroup$
    – tremor
    Apr 4 at 14:25










  • $begingroup$
    Great job! It's nice have have great new users!
    $endgroup$
    – North
    Apr 4 at 14:36






  • 2




    $begingroup$
    @Sensoray TWO spaces, not four. :) Welcome tremor and congrats on the checkmark!
    $endgroup$
    – Rubio
    Apr 4 at 19:47












  • 1




    $begingroup$
    nice first answer, welcome here! +1 in respect :)
    $endgroup$
    – Omega Krypton
    Apr 4 at 14:23











  • $begingroup$
    Welcome to puzzling! You formatted it mostly right, just need to put 4 spaces at the end of each line to make the new one appear on a new line.
    $endgroup$
    – Sensoray
    Apr 4 at 14:24










  • $begingroup$
    Thanks @Sensoray - I was wondering what I was doing wrong there with the spoiler format, never used it before.
    $endgroup$
    – tremor
    Apr 4 at 14:25










  • $begingroup$
    Great job! It's nice have have great new users!
    $endgroup$
    – North
    Apr 4 at 14:36






  • 2




    $begingroup$
    @Sensoray TWO spaces, not four. :) Welcome tremor and congrats on the checkmark!
    $endgroup$
    – Rubio
    Apr 4 at 19:47







1




1




$begingroup$
nice first answer, welcome here! +1 in respect :)
$endgroup$
– Omega Krypton
Apr 4 at 14:23





$begingroup$
nice first answer, welcome here! +1 in respect :)
$endgroup$
– Omega Krypton
Apr 4 at 14:23













$begingroup$
Welcome to puzzling! You formatted it mostly right, just need to put 4 spaces at the end of each line to make the new one appear on a new line.
$endgroup$
– Sensoray
Apr 4 at 14:24




$begingroup$
Welcome to puzzling! You formatted it mostly right, just need to put 4 spaces at the end of each line to make the new one appear on a new line.
$endgroup$
– Sensoray
Apr 4 at 14:24












$begingroup$
Thanks @Sensoray - I was wondering what I was doing wrong there with the spoiler format, never used it before.
$endgroup$
– tremor
Apr 4 at 14:25




$begingroup$
Thanks @Sensoray - I was wondering what I was doing wrong there with the spoiler format, never used it before.
$endgroup$
– tremor
Apr 4 at 14:25












$begingroup$
Great job! It's nice have have great new users!
$endgroup$
– North
Apr 4 at 14:36




$begingroup$
Great job! It's nice have have great new users!
$endgroup$
– North
Apr 4 at 14:36




2




2




$begingroup$
@Sensoray TWO spaces, not four. :) Welcome tremor and congrats on the checkmark!
$endgroup$
– Rubio
Apr 4 at 19:47




$begingroup$
@Sensoray TWO spaces, not four. :) Welcome tremor and congrats on the checkmark!
$endgroup$
– Rubio
Apr 4 at 19:47











8












$begingroup$

I found the same one as @Omega Krypton did (first time I got answer sniped, darn!), but I also found a possible letter doubling solution:




ESTER
RESET
STEER
TREES




and a couple of questionable ones:




EWERS
RESEW
SEWER
WERES (fantasy term for people who can transform into other beings; doesn’t appear in OED, Merriam-Webster, or Dictionary.com unfortunately)

EASTS
SEATS
ASSET
TASES (uses a taser on someone; doesn’t appear in OED but does on MW and Dictionary.com)







share|improve this answer









$endgroup$












  • $begingroup$
    For weres: en.wiktionary.org/wiki/weres?
    $endgroup$
    – Omega Krypton
    Apr 4 at 12:00










  • $begingroup$
    Your first one is my intended letter-doubling solution. (It could also include rot13(GREFR)). Your other ones are indeed questionable, but you can have the checkmark - @OmegaKrypton has the other answer I was looking for, but found it with a computer, so this one wins for now - unless somebody can find a 6+ set...
    $endgroup$
    – Darrel Hoffman
    Apr 4 at 12:38










  • $begingroup$
    Thanks so much for your inspiration for the 6+ set!
    $endgroup$
    – Omega Krypton
    Apr 4 at 12:45










  • $begingroup$
    and sorry for taking away your check, a +1 for you in respect!
    $endgroup$
    – Omega Krypton
    Apr 4 at 12:54
















8












$begingroup$

I found the same one as @Omega Krypton did (first time I got answer sniped, darn!), but I also found a possible letter doubling solution:




ESTER
RESET
STEER
TREES




and a couple of questionable ones:




EWERS
RESEW
SEWER
WERES (fantasy term for people who can transform into other beings; doesn’t appear in OED, Merriam-Webster, or Dictionary.com unfortunately)

EASTS
SEATS
ASSET
TASES (uses a taser on someone; doesn’t appear in OED but does on MW and Dictionary.com)







share|improve this answer









$endgroup$












  • $begingroup$
    For weres: en.wiktionary.org/wiki/weres?
    $endgroup$
    – Omega Krypton
    Apr 4 at 12:00










  • $begingroup$
    Your first one is my intended letter-doubling solution. (It could also include rot13(GREFR)). Your other ones are indeed questionable, but you can have the checkmark - @OmegaKrypton has the other answer I was looking for, but found it with a computer, so this one wins for now - unless somebody can find a 6+ set...
    $endgroup$
    – Darrel Hoffman
    Apr 4 at 12:38










  • $begingroup$
    Thanks so much for your inspiration for the 6+ set!
    $endgroup$
    – Omega Krypton
    Apr 4 at 12:45










  • $begingroup$
    and sorry for taking away your check, a +1 for you in respect!
    $endgroup$
    – Omega Krypton
    Apr 4 at 12:54














8












8








8





$begingroup$

I found the same one as @Omega Krypton did (first time I got answer sniped, darn!), but I also found a possible letter doubling solution:




ESTER
RESET
STEER
TREES




and a couple of questionable ones:




EWERS
RESEW
SEWER
WERES (fantasy term for people who can transform into other beings; doesn’t appear in OED, Merriam-Webster, or Dictionary.com unfortunately)

EASTS
SEATS
ASSET
TASES (uses a taser on someone; doesn’t appear in OED but does on MW and Dictionary.com)







share|improve this answer









$endgroup$



I found the same one as @Omega Krypton did (first time I got answer sniped, darn!), but I also found a possible letter doubling solution:




ESTER
RESET
STEER
TREES




and a couple of questionable ones:




EWERS
RESEW
SEWER
WERES (fantasy term for people who can transform into other beings; doesn’t appear in OED, Merriam-Webster, or Dictionary.com unfortunately)

EASTS
SEATS
ASSET
TASES (uses a taser on someone; doesn’t appear in OED but does on MW and Dictionary.com)








share|improve this answer












share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer










answered Apr 4 at 6:25









PiIsNot3PiIsNot3

2,665538




2,665538











  • $begingroup$
    For weres: en.wiktionary.org/wiki/weres?
    $endgroup$
    – Omega Krypton
    Apr 4 at 12:00










  • $begingroup$
    Your first one is my intended letter-doubling solution. (It could also include rot13(GREFR)). Your other ones are indeed questionable, but you can have the checkmark - @OmegaKrypton has the other answer I was looking for, but found it with a computer, so this one wins for now - unless somebody can find a 6+ set...
    $endgroup$
    – Darrel Hoffman
    Apr 4 at 12:38










  • $begingroup$
    Thanks so much for your inspiration for the 6+ set!
    $endgroup$
    – Omega Krypton
    Apr 4 at 12:45










  • $begingroup$
    and sorry for taking away your check, a +1 for you in respect!
    $endgroup$
    – Omega Krypton
    Apr 4 at 12:54

















  • $begingroup$
    For weres: en.wiktionary.org/wiki/weres?
    $endgroup$
    – Omega Krypton
    Apr 4 at 12:00










  • $begingroup$
    Your first one is my intended letter-doubling solution. (It could also include rot13(GREFR)). Your other ones are indeed questionable, but you can have the checkmark - @OmegaKrypton has the other answer I was looking for, but found it with a computer, so this one wins for now - unless somebody can find a 6+ set...
    $endgroup$
    – Darrel Hoffman
    Apr 4 at 12:38










  • $begingroup$
    Thanks so much for your inspiration for the 6+ set!
    $endgroup$
    – Omega Krypton
    Apr 4 at 12:45










  • $begingroup$
    and sorry for taking away your check, a +1 for you in respect!
    $endgroup$
    – Omega Krypton
    Apr 4 at 12:54
















$begingroup$
For weres: en.wiktionary.org/wiki/weres?
$endgroup$
– Omega Krypton
Apr 4 at 12:00




$begingroup$
For weres: en.wiktionary.org/wiki/weres?
$endgroup$
– Omega Krypton
Apr 4 at 12:00












$begingroup$
Your first one is my intended letter-doubling solution. (It could also include rot13(GREFR)). Your other ones are indeed questionable, but you can have the checkmark - @OmegaKrypton has the other answer I was looking for, but found it with a computer, so this one wins for now - unless somebody can find a 6+ set...
$endgroup$
– Darrel Hoffman
Apr 4 at 12:38




$begingroup$
Your first one is my intended letter-doubling solution. (It could also include rot13(GREFR)). Your other ones are indeed questionable, but you can have the checkmark - @OmegaKrypton has the other answer I was looking for, but found it with a computer, so this one wins for now - unless somebody can find a 6+ set...
$endgroup$
– Darrel Hoffman
Apr 4 at 12:38












$begingroup$
Thanks so much for your inspiration for the 6+ set!
$endgroup$
– Omega Krypton
Apr 4 at 12:45




$begingroup$
Thanks so much for your inspiration for the 6+ set!
$endgroup$
– Omega Krypton
Apr 4 at 12:45












$begingroup$
and sorry for taking away your check, a +1 for you in respect!
$endgroup$
– Omega Krypton
Apr 4 at 12:54





$begingroup$
and sorry for taking away your check, a +1 for you in respect!
$endgroup$
– Omega Krypton
Apr 4 at 12:54












7












$begingroup$

6 words (with doubling) (self-generated) (thanks @PiIsNot3 for inspiration)





esters
resets
steers
treses



5 words (Confession: with computer)





emits
mites
items
times
smite






share|improve this answer











$endgroup$












  • $begingroup$
    This is one of the sets I was looking for. @PilsNot3 found the other one, afraid I'll have to give them the checkmark since you used a computer, but take a +1 anyhow.
    $endgroup$
    – Darrel Hoffman
    Apr 4 at 12:39






  • 1




    $begingroup$
    Hmm, a bit obscure on that last one, but I guess I can allow it - in the interests of tie-breaking though, those requiring the fewest letter-doublings will take precedence. (e.g. if someone finds a 6-letter with only 1 or no doubles, it would beat this one. A 7-letter or more would beat either, etc.)
    $endgroup$
    – Darrel Hoffman
    Apr 4 at 12:53










  • $begingroup$
    Got it, thanks for the check!
    $endgroup$
    – Omega Krypton
    Apr 4 at 12:53











  • $begingroup$
    @DarrelHoffman please give the check to tremor with one less dupe, thanks:)
    $endgroup$
    – Omega Krypton
    Apr 4 at 14:28















7












$begingroup$

6 words (with doubling) (self-generated) (thanks @PiIsNot3 for inspiration)





esters
resets
steers
treses



5 words (Confession: with computer)





emits
mites
items
times
smite






share|improve this answer











$endgroup$












  • $begingroup$
    This is one of the sets I was looking for. @PilsNot3 found the other one, afraid I'll have to give them the checkmark since you used a computer, but take a +1 anyhow.
    $endgroup$
    – Darrel Hoffman
    Apr 4 at 12:39






  • 1




    $begingroup$
    Hmm, a bit obscure on that last one, but I guess I can allow it - in the interests of tie-breaking though, those requiring the fewest letter-doublings will take precedence. (e.g. if someone finds a 6-letter with only 1 or no doubles, it would beat this one. A 7-letter or more would beat either, etc.)
    $endgroup$
    – Darrel Hoffman
    Apr 4 at 12:53










  • $begingroup$
    Got it, thanks for the check!
    $endgroup$
    – Omega Krypton
    Apr 4 at 12:53











  • $begingroup$
    @DarrelHoffman please give the check to tremor with one less dupe, thanks:)
    $endgroup$
    – Omega Krypton
    Apr 4 at 14:28













7












7








7





$begingroup$

6 words (with doubling) (self-generated) (thanks @PiIsNot3 for inspiration)





esters
resets
steers
treses



5 words (Confession: with computer)





emits
mites
items
times
smite






share|improve this answer











$endgroup$



6 words (with doubling) (self-generated) (thanks @PiIsNot3 for inspiration)





esters
resets
steers
treses



5 words (Confession: with computer)





emits
mites
items
times
smite







share|improve this answer














share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer








edited Apr 4 at 12:44

























answered Apr 4 at 6:18









Omega KryptonOmega Krypton

5,4892849




5,4892849











  • $begingroup$
    This is one of the sets I was looking for. @PilsNot3 found the other one, afraid I'll have to give them the checkmark since you used a computer, but take a +1 anyhow.
    $endgroup$
    – Darrel Hoffman
    Apr 4 at 12:39






  • 1




    $begingroup$
    Hmm, a bit obscure on that last one, but I guess I can allow it - in the interests of tie-breaking though, those requiring the fewest letter-doublings will take precedence. (e.g. if someone finds a 6-letter with only 1 or no doubles, it would beat this one. A 7-letter or more would beat either, etc.)
    $endgroup$
    – Darrel Hoffman
    Apr 4 at 12:53










  • $begingroup$
    Got it, thanks for the check!
    $endgroup$
    – Omega Krypton
    Apr 4 at 12:53











  • $begingroup$
    @DarrelHoffman please give the check to tremor with one less dupe, thanks:)
    $endgroup$
    – Omega Krypton
    Apr 4 at 14:28
















  • $begingroup$
    This is one of the sets I was looking for. @PilsNot3 found the other one, afraid I'll have to give them the checkmark since you used a computer, but take a +1 anyhow.
    $endgroup$
    – Darrel Hoffman
    Apr 4 at 12:39






  • 1




    $begingroup$
    Hmm, a bit obscure on that last one, but I guess I can allow it - in the interests of tie-breaking though, those requiring the fewest letter-doublings will take precedence. (e.g. if someone finds a 6-letter with only 1 or no doubles, it would beat this one. A 7-letter or more would beat either, etc.)
    $endgroup$
    – Darrel Hoffman
    Apr 4 at 12:53










  • $begingroup$
    Got it, thanks for the check!
    $endgroup$
    – Omega Krypton
    Apr 4 at 12:53











  • $begingroup$
    @DarrelHoffman please give the check to tremor with one less dupe, thanks:)
    $endgroup$
    – Omega Krypton
    Apr 4 at 14:28















$begingroup$
This is one of the sets I was looking for. @PilsNot3 found the other one, afraid I'll have to give them the checkmark since you used a computer, but take a +1 anyhow.
$endgroup$
– Darrel Hoffman
Apr 4 at 12:39




$begingroup$
This is one of the sets I was looking for. @PilsNot3 found the other one, afraid I'll have to give them the checkmark since you used a computer, but take a +1 anyhow.
$endgroup$
– Darrel Hoffman
Apr 4 at 12:39




1




1




$begingroup$
Hmm, a bit obscure on that last one, but I guess I can allow it - in the interests of tie-breaking though, those requiring the fewest letter-doublings will take precedence. (e.g. if someone finds a 6-letter with only 1 or no doubles, it would beat this one. A 7-letter or more would beat either, etc.)
$endgroup$
– Darrel Hoffman
Apr 4 at 12:53




$begingroup$
Hmm, a bit obscure on that last one, but I guess I can allow it - in the interests of tie-breaking though, those requiring the fewest letter-doublings will take precedence. (e.g. if someone finds a 6-letter with only 1 or no doubles, it would beat this one. A 7-letter or more would beat either, etc.)
$endgroup$
– Darrel Hoffman
Apr 4 at 12:53












$begingroup$
Got it, thanks for the check!
$endgroup$
– Omega Krypton
Apr 4 at 12:53





$begingroup$
Got it, thanks for the check!
$endgroup$
– Omega Krypton
Apr 4 at 12:53













$begingroup$
@DarrelHoffman please give the check to tremor with one less dupe, thanks:)
$endgroup$
– Omega Krypton
Apr 4 at 14:28




$begingroup$
@DarrelHoffman please give the check to tremor with one less dupe, thanks:)
$endgroup$
– Omega Krypton
Apr 4 at 14:28











5












$begingroup$

I think I've found another one




argon
groan
nagor
organ
rogan (as in rogan josh)







share|improve this answer









$endgroup$












  • $begingroup$
    I can accept your 3rd word, but the 5th one I'm pretty sure is a proper noun...
    $endgroup$
    – Darrel Hoffman
    Apr 4 at 12:34















5












$begingroup$

I think I've found another one




argon
groan
nagor
organ
rogan (as in rogan josh)







share|improve this answer









$endgroup$












  • $begingroup$
    I can accept your 3rd word, but the 5th one I'm pretty sure is a proper noun...
    $endgroup$
    – Darrel Hoffman
    Apr 4 at 12:34













5












5








5





$begingroup$

I think I've found another one




argon
groan
nagor
organ
rogan (as in rogan josh)







share|improve this answer









$endgroup$



I think I've found another one




argon
groan
nagor
organ
rogan (as in rogan josh)








share|improve this answer












share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer










answered Apr 4 at 10:26









hexominohexomino

47.5k4143223




47.5k4143223











  • $begingroup$
    I can accept your 3rd word, but the 5th one I'm pretty sure is a proper noun...
    $endgroup$
    – Darrel Hoffman
    Apr 4 at 12:34
















  • $begingroup$
    I can accept your 3rd word, but the 5th one I'm pretty sure is a proper noun...
    $endgroup$
    – Darrel Hoffman
    Apr 4 at 12:34















$begingroup$
I can accept your 3rd word, but the 5th one I'm pretty sure is a proper noun...
$endgroup$
– Darrel Hoffman
Apr 4 at 12:34




$begingroup$
I can accept your 3rd word, but the 5th one I'm pretty sure is a proper noun...
$endgroup$
– Darrel Hoffman
Apr 4 at 12:34











5












$begingroup$

Shamelessly taken from @Tom’s question and @Soltius’ answer is this one (did you collaborate)??




Aretes

Eaters

Reseat

Seater

Teaser







share|improve this answer









$endgroup$












  • $begingroup$
    I don't think I've seen the question you're referring to, so no, no collaboration. I feel like your first word might be considered either a proper noun or a foreign word? Seems to be consistently either capitalized or italicized in that article...
    $endgroup$
    – Darrel Hoffman
    Apr 4 at 14:23










  • $begingroup$
    @DarrelHoffman It's in SOWPODS and other Scrabble dictionaries, but seems to be there for its other meaning of mountain ridges, which would normally be written with an accent. (See scrabble.hasbro.com/en-us/tools#dictionary .)
    $endgroup$
    – Especially Lime
    Apr 4 at 14:31










  • $begingroup$
    @DarrelHoffman please click the link/word for the English usage — plus I believe I got this answer with the same number of doubled letters before the currently accepted answer. It doesn’t appear, from the Wikipedia article, that it is a proper noun either.
    $endgroup$
    – El-Guest
    Apr 4 at 17:12











  • $begingroup$
    This is why I wish we were allowed more than one check-marked answer - we've also got a new contender that managed 6 letters with no doubling, though the words grow increasingly obscure. Not quite sure where to draw the line...
    $endgroup$
    – Darrel Hoffman
    Apr 4 at 17:55















5












$begingroup$

Shamelessly taken from @Tom’s question and @Soltius’ answer is this one (did you collaborate)??




Aretes

Eaters

Reseat

Seater

Teaser







share|improve this answer









$endgroup$












  • $begingroup$
    I don't think I've seen the question you're referring to, so no, no collaboration. I feel like your first word might be considered either a proper noun or a foreign word? Seems to be consistently either capitalized or italicized in that article...
    $endgroup$
    – Darrel Hoffman
    Apr 4 at 14:23










  • $begingroup$
    @DarrelHoffman It's in SOWPODS and other Scrabble dictionaries, but seems to be there for its other meaning of mountain ridges, which would normally be written with an accent. (See scrabble.hasbro.com/en-us/tools#dictionary .)
    $endgroup$
    – Especially Lime
    Apr 4 at 14:31










  • $begingroup$
    @DarrelHoffman please click the link/word for the English usage — plus I believe I got this answer with the same number of doubled letters before the currently accepted answer. It doesn’t appear, from the Wikipedia article, that it is a proper noun either.
    $endgroup$
    – El-Guest
    Apr 4 at 17:12











  • $begingroup$
    This is why I wish we were allowed more than one check-marked answer - we've also got a new contender that managed 6 letters with no doubling, though the words grow increasingly obscure. Not quite sure where to draw the line...
    $endgroup$
    – Darrel Hoffman
    Apr 4 at 17:55













5












5








5





$begingroup$

Shamelessly taken from @Tom’s question and @Soltius’ answer is this one (did you collaborate)??




Aretes

Eaters

Reseat

Seater

Teaser







share|improve this answer









$endgroup$



Shamelessly taken from @Tom’s question and @Soltius’ answer is this one (did you collaborate)??




Aretes

Eaters

Reseat

Seater

Teaser








share|improve this answer












share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer










answered Apr 4 at 13:50









El-GuestEl-Guest

22k35193




22k35193











  • $begingroup$
    I don't think I've seen the question you're referring to, so no, no collaboration. I feel like your first word might be considered either a proper noun or a foreign word? Seems to be consistently either capitalized or italicized in that article...
    $endgroup$
    – Darrel Hoffman
    Apr 4 at 14:23










  • $begingroup$
    @DarrelHoffman It's in SOWPODS and other Scrabble dictionaries, but seems to be there for its other meaning of mountain ridges, which would normally be written with an accent. (See scrabble.hasbro.com/en-us/tools#dictionary .)
    $endgroup$
    – Especially Lime
    Apr 4 at 14:31










  • $begingroup$
    @DarrelHoffman please click the link/word for the English usage — plus I believe I got this answer with the same number of doubled letters before the currently accepted answer. It doesn’t appear, from the Wikipedia article, that it is a proper noun either.
    $endgroup$
    – El-Guest
    Apr 4 at 17:12











  • $begingroup$
    This is why I wish we were allowed more than one check-marked answer - we've also got a new contender that managed 6 letters with no doubling, though the words grow increasingly obscure. Not quite sure where to draw the line...
    $endgroup$
    – Darrel Hoffman
    Apr 4 at 17:55
















  • $begingroup$
    I don't think I've seen the question you're referring to, so no, no collaboration. I feel like your first word might be considered either a proper noun or a foreign word? Seems to be consistently either capitalized or italicized in that article...
    $endgroup$
    – Darrel Hoffman
    Apr 4 at 14:23










  • $begingroup$
    @DarrelHoffman It's in SOWPODS and other Scrabble dictionaries, but seems to be there for its other meaning of mountain ridges, which would normally be written with an accent. (See scrabble.hasbro.com/en-us/tools#dictionary .)
    $endgroup$
    – Especially Lime
    Apr 4 at 14:31










  • $begingroup$
    @DarrelHoffman please click the link/word for the English usage — plus I believe I got this answer with the same number of doubled letters before the currently accepted answer. It doesn’t appear, from the Wikipedia article, that it is a proper noun either.
    $endgroup$
    – El-Guest
    Apr 4 at 17:12











  • $begingroup$
    This is why I wish we were allowed more than one check-marked answer - we've also got a new contender that managed 6 letters with no doubling, though the words grow increasingly obscure. Not quite sure where to draw the line...
    $endgroup$
    – Darrel Hoffman
    Apr 4 at 17:55















$begingroup$
I don't think I've seen the question you're referring to, so no, no collaboration. I feel like your first word might be considered either a proper noun or a foreign word? Seems to be consistently either capitalized or italicized in that article...
$endgroup$
– Darrel Hoffman
Apr 4 at 14:23




$begingroup$
I don't think I've seen the question you're referring to, so no, no collaboration. I feel like your first word might be considered either a proper noun or a foreign word? Seems to be consistently either capitalized or italicized in that article...
$endgroup$
– Darrel Hoffman
Apr 4 at 14:23












$begingroup$
@DarrelHoffman It's in SOWPODS and other Scrabble dictionaries, but seems to be there for its other meaning of mountain ridges, which would normally be written with an accent. (See scrabble.hasbro.com/en-us/tools#dictionary .)
$endgroup$
– Especially Lime
Apr 4 at 14:31




$begingroup$
@DarrelHoffman It's in SOWPODS and other Scrabble dictionaries, but seems to be there for its other meaning of mountain ridges, which would normally be written with an accent. (See scrabble.hasbro.com/en-us/tools#dictionary .)
$endgroup$
– Especially Lime
Apr 4 at 14:31












$begingroup$
@DarrelHoffman please click the link/word for the English usage — plus I believe I got this answer with the same number of doubled letters before the currently accepted answer. It doesn’t appear, from the Wikipedia article, that it is a proper noun either.
$endgroup$
– El-Guest
Apr 4 at 17:12





$begingroup$
@DarrelHoffman please click the link/word for the English usage — plus I believe I got this answer with the same number of doubled letters before the currently accepted answer. It doesn’t appear, from the Wikipedia article, that it is a proper noun either.
$endgroup$
– El-Guest
Apr 4 at 17:12













$begingroup$
This is why I wish we were allowed more than one check-marked answer - we've also got a new contender that managed 6 letters with no doubling, though the words grow increasingly obscure. Not quite sure where to draw the line...
$endgroup$
– Darrel Hoffman
Apr 4 at 17:55




$begingroup$
This is why I wish we were allowed more than one check-marked answer - we've also got a new contender that managed 6 letters with no doubling, though the words grow increasingly obscure. Not quite sure where to draw the line...
$endgroup$
– Darrel Hoffman
Apr 4 at 17:55











3












$begingroup$

For these kinds of questions where "Scrabble dictionary rules" always top out at 5 or 6 characters, I always wish we would allow "crossword dictionary rules." For example:



(6 letters, all kinds of cheats)




ANOLES /
NO SALE /
ON SALE /
LANOSE /
E-LOANS /
SLOANE




(6 letters, 20% proper nouns)




ENTERS /
NESTER /
TENSER /
RESENT /
STERNE




(5 letters, 40% cheats)




APRES /
PEARS /
EARPS /
REAPS /
SPARE




(6 letters, 80% proper nouns)




EISNER /
IRENES /
SERINE /
NEREIS /
RIESEN




To justify my posting as an answer, here's one with some uncommon words that hasn't been listed yet. (6 letters, no cheats)




ALERTS /
LASTER /
ESTRAL /
RATELS /
TALERS /
STALER







share|improve this answer









$endgroup$












  • $begingroup$
    I don't know, judges? That last one looks plausible, (though the others are clearly bending the rules a bit).
    $endgroup$
    – Darrel Hoffman
    Apr 4 at 18:01










  • $begingroup$
    @DarrelHoffman Talers, the link says Thalers. And that Taler became an alternate german word, but it did not affect the english spelling. So it doesn't quite count. Good try though!!!
    $endgroup$
    – Sensoray
    Apr 4 at 20:08










  • $begingroup$
    @Sensoray: "Taler" is a Scrabble-accepted historical variant of "Thaler" — as is, for that matter, "Dollar"! en.wiktionary.org/wiki/taler#Etymology_2 I just figured the Wikipedia link would be most relevant to the casual what's-thatter.
    $endgroup$
    – Quuxplusone
    Apr 4 at 22:12















3












$begingroup$

For these kinds of questions where "Scrabble dictionary rules" always top out at 5 or 6 characters, I always wish we would allow "crossword dictionary rules." For example:



(6 letters, all kinds of cheats)




ANOLES /
NO SALE /
ON SALE /
LANOSE /
E-LOANS /
SLOANE




(6 letters, 20% proper nouns)




ENTERS /
NESTER /
TENSER /
RESENT /
STERNE




(5 letters, 40% cheats)




APRES /
PEARS /
EARPS /
REAPS /
SPARE




(6 letters, 80% proper nouns)




EISNER /
IRENES /
SERINE /
NEREIS /
RIESEN




To justify my posting as an answer, here's one with some uncommon words that hasn't been listed yet. (6 letters, no cheats)




ALERTS /
LASTER /
ESTRAL /
RATELS /
TALERS /
STALER







share|improve this answer









$endgroup$












  • $begingroup$
    I don't know, judges? That last one looks plausible, (though the others are clearly bending the rules a bit).
    $endgroup$
    – Darrel Hoffman
    Apr 4 at 18:01










  • $begingroup$
    @DarrelHoffman Talers, the link says Thalers. And that Taler became an alternate german word, but it did not affect the english spelling. So it doesn't quite count. Good try though!!!
    $endgroup$
    – Sensoray
    Apr 4 at 20:08










  • $begingroup$
    @Sensoray: "Taler" is a Scrabble-accepted historical variant of "Thaler" — as is, for that matter, "Dollar"! en.wiktionary.org/wiki/taler#Etymology_2 I just figured the Wikipedia link would be most relevant to the casual what's-thatter.
    $endgroup$
    – Quuxplusone
    Apr 4 at 22:12













3












3








3





$begingroup$

For these kinds of questions where "Scrabble dictionary rules" always top out at 5 or 6 characters, I always wish we would allow "crossword dictionary rules." For example:



(6 letters, all kinds of cheats)




ANOLES /
NO SALE /
ON SALE /
LANOSE /
E-LOANS /
SLOANE




(6 letters, 20% proper nouns)




ENTERS /
NESTER /
TENSER /
RESENT /
STERNE




(5 letters, 40% cheats)




APRES /
PEARS /
EARPS /
REAPS /
SPARE




(6 letters, 80% proper nouns)




EISNER /
IRENES /
SERINE /
NEREIS /
RIESEN




To justify my posting as an answer, here's one with some uncommon words that hasn't been listed yet. (6 letters, no cheats)




ALERTS /
LASTER /
ESTRAL /
RATELS /
TALERS /
STALER







share|improve this answer









$endgroup$



For these kinds of questions where "Scrabble dictionary rules" always top out at 5 or 6 characters, I always wish we would allow "crossword dictionary rules." For example:



(6 letters, all kinds of cheats)




ANOLES /
NO SALE /
ON SALE /
LANOSE /
E-LOANS /
SLOANE




(6 letters, 20% proper nouns)




ENTERS /
NESTER /
TENSER /
RESENT /
STERNE




(5 letters, 40% cheats)




APRES /
PEARS /
EARPS /
REAPS /
SPARE




(6 letters, 80% proper nouns)




EISNER /
IRENES /
SERINE /
NEREIS /
RIESEN




To justify my posting as an answer, here's one with some uncommon words that hasn't been listed yet. (6 letters, no cheats)




ALERTS /
LASTER /
ESTRAL /
RATELS /
TALERS /
STALER








share|improve this answer












share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer










answered Apr 4 at 16:39









QuuxplusoneQuuxplusone

501213




501213











  • $begingroup$
    I don't know, judges? That last one looks plausible, (though the others are clearly bending the rules a bit).
    $endgroup$
    – Darrel Hoffman
    Apr 4 at 18:01










  • $begingroup$
    @DarrelHoffman Talers, the link says Thalers. And that Taler became an alternate german word, but it did not affect the english spelling. So it doesn't quite count. Good try though!!!
    $endgroup$
    – Sensoray
    Apr 4 at 20:08










  • $begingroup$
    @Sensoray: "Taler" is a Scrabble-accepted historical variant of "Thaler" — as is, for that matter, "Dollar"! en.wiktionary.org/wiki/taler#Etymology_2 I just figured the Wikipedia link would be most relevant to the casual what's-thatter.
    $endgroup$
    – Quuxplusone
    Apr 4 at 22:12
















  • $begingroup$
    I don't know, judges? That last one looks plausible, (though the others are clearly bending the rules a bit).
    $endgroup$
    – Darrel Hoffman
    Apr 4 at 18:01










  • $begingroup$
    @DarrelHoffman Talers, the link says Thalers. And that Taler became an alternate german word, but it did not affect the english spelling. So it doesn't quite count. Good try though!!!
    $endgroup$
    – Sensoray
    Apr 4 at 20:08










  • $begingroup$
    @Sensoray: "Taler" is a Scrabble-accepted historical variant of "Thaler" — as is, for that matter, "Dollar"! en.wiktionary.org/wiki/taler#Etymology_2 I just figured the Wikipedia link would be most relevant to the casual what's-thatter.
    $endgroup$
    – Quuxplusone
    Apr 4 at 22:12















$begingroup$
I don't know, judges? That last one looks plausible, (though the others are clearly bending the rules a bit).
$endgroup$
– Darrel Hoffman
Apr 4 at 18:01




$begingroup$
I don't know, judges? That last one looks plausible, (though the others are clearly bending the rules a bit).
$endgroup$
– Darrel Hoffman
Apr 4 at 18:01












$begingroup$
@DarrelHoffman Talers, the link says Thalers. And that Taler became an alternate german word, but it did not affect the english spelling. So it doesn't quite count. Good try though!!!
$endgroup$
– Sensoray
Apr 4 at 20:08




$begingroup$
@DarrelHoffman Talers, the link says Thalers. And that Taler became an alternate german word, but it did not affect the english spelling. So it doesn't quite count. Good try though!!!
$endgroup$
– Sensoray
Apr 4 at 20:08












$begingroup$
@Sensoray: "Taler" is a Scrabble-accepted historical variant of "Thaler" — as is, for that matter, "Dollar"! en.wiktionary.org/wiki/taler#Etymology_2 I just figured the Wikipedia link would be most relevant to the casual what's-thatter.
$endgroup$
– Quuxplusone
Apr 4 at 22:12




$begingroup$
@Sensoray: "Taler" is a Scrabble-accepted historical variant of "Thaler" — as is, for that matter, "Dollar"! en.wiktionary.org/wiki/taler#Etymology_2 I just figured the Wikipedia link would be most relevant to the casual what's-thatter.
$endgroup$
– Quuxplusone
Apr 4 at 22:12

















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