What is a Samsaran Word™? Planned maintenance scheduled April 17/18, 2019 at 00:00UTC (8:00pm US/Eastern) Announcing the arrival of Valued Associate #679: Cesar Manara Unicorn Meta Zoo #1: Why another podcast?What is a Golden Word™?What is a Recursive Word™?What is a Special PoS Word™?What is an Antigrammatic Word™?What is an Amplified Word™?What is a God Word™?What is a Coalescent Word™?What is a Workman Word™?What is an Ipsum Word™?What is a Trimpar Word™?

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What is a Samsaran Word™?



Planned maintenance scheduled April 17/18, 2019 at 00:00UTC (8:00pm US/Eastern)
Announcing the arrival of Valued Associate #679: Cesar Manara
Unicorn Meta Zoo #1: Why another podcast?What is a Golden Word™?What is a Recursive Word™?What is a Special PoS Word™?What is an Antigrammatic Word™?What is an Amplified Word™?What is a God Word™?What is a Coalescent Word™?What is a Workman Word™?What is an Ipsum Word™?What is a Trimpar Word™?










21












$begingroup$


In the spirit of the What is a Word™/Phrase™ series started by JLee, a special brand of Phrase™ and Word™ puzzles.




If a word conforms to a special rule, I call it a Samsaran Word™.

Use the examples below to find the rule.



$$
% set Title text. (spaces around the text ARE important; do not remove.)
% increase Pad value only if your entries are longer than the title bar.
%
defPadP1.0 defTitletextbf Samsaran
%
defS#1#2Space#120px#2pxdefP#1V#1em defV#1S#19
defTTitletextbfWords^;!™PaddefNTPadtextbfNotT displaystyle
smashlower29pxbbox[yellow]phantomrlaprubio.2018.03.05S6px0
beginarrayccPadT&NT\endarrayatopdefV#1S#15
beginarrayhlinePadT&NT\hline
%
textPIPELINE&textCONDUIT\ hline
textAVERAGE&textMEDIOCRE\ hline
textITEMIZE&textENUMERATE\ hline
textACCEPTABLE&textADEQUATE\ hline
textINHABITANT&textRESIDENT\ hline
textANTEJURAMENTUM&textPLEA\ hline
textLIVELINESS&textZESTINESS\ hline
textSPOKESWOMEN&textSPOKESMEN\ hline
textUNINSULTING&textRESPECTFUL\ hline
textVIOLATIONAL&textREBELLIOUS\ hline
textANTICAPITALIST&textCOMMUNIST\ hline
textWEATHER-BEATEN&textDILAPIDATED\ hline
hline
endarray$$



Or, in a CSV:



SAMSARAN Words™,Not SAMSARAN Words™
PIPELINE, CONDUIT
AVERAGE, MEDIOCRE
ITEMIZE, ENUMERATE
ACCEPTABLE, ADEQUATE
INHABITANT, RESIDENT
ANTEJURAMENTUM, PLEA
LIVELINESS, ZESTINESS
SPOKESWOMEN, SPOKESMEN
UNINSULTING, RESPECTFUL
VIOLATIONAL, REBELLIOUS
ANTICAPITALIST, COMMUNIST
WEATHER-BEATEN, DILAPIDATED


These are not the only examples of Samsaran Words™, many more exist.



What makes a word Samsaran?










share|improve this question











$endgroup$







  • 2




    $begingroup$
    I had no idea, but when I looked at the answer, I was definitely impressed! $(+1)$
    $endgroup$
    – user477343
    Apr 3 at 0:24















21












$begingroup$


In the spirit of the What is a Word™/Phrase™ series started by JLee, a special brand of Phrase™ and Word™ puzzles.




If a word conforms to a special rule, I call it a Samsaran Word™.

Use the examples below to find the rule.



$$
% set Title text. (spaces around the text ARE important; do not remove.)
% increase Pad value only if your entries are longer than the title bar.
%
defPadP1.0 defTitletextbf Samsaran
%
defS#1#2Space#120px#2pxdefP#1V#1em defV#1S#19
defTTitletextbfWords^;!™PaddefNTPadtextbfNotT displaystyle
smashlower29pxbbox[yellow]phantomrlaprubio.2018.03.05S6px0
beginarrayccPadT&NT\endarrayatopdefV#1S#15
beginarrayhlinePadT&NT\hline
%
textPIPELINE&textCONDUIT\ hline
textAVERAGE&textMEDIOCRE\ hline
textITEMIZE&textENUMERATE\ hline
textACCEPTABLE&textADEQUATE\ hline
textINHABITANT&textRESIDENT\ hline
textANTEJURAMENTUM&textPLEA\ hline
textLIVELINESS&textZESTINESS\ hline
textSPOKESWOMEN&textSPOKESMEN\ hline
textUNINSULTING&textRESPECTFUL\ hline
textVIOLATIONAL&textREBELLIOUS\ hline
textANTICAPITALIST&textCOMMUNIST\ hline
textWEATHER-BEATEN&textDILAPIDATED\ hline
hline
endarray$$



Or, in a CSV:



SAMSARAN Words™,Not SAMSARAN Words™
PIPELINE, CONDUIT
AVERAGE, MEDIOCRE
ITEMIZE, ENUMERATE
ACCEPTABLE, ADEQUATE
INHABITANT, RESIDENT
ANTEJURAMENTUM, PLEA
LIVELINESS, ZESTINESS
SPOKESWOMEN, SPOKESMEN
UNINSULTING, RESPECTFUL
VIOLATIONAL, REBELLIOUS
ANTICAPITALIST, COMMUNIST
WEATHER-BEATEN, DILAPIDATED


These are not the only examples of Samsaran Words™, many more exist.



What makes a word Samsaran?










share|improve this question











$endgroup$







  • 2




    $begingroup$
    I had no idea, but when I looked at the answer, I was definitely impressed! $(+1)$
    $endgroup$
    – user477343
    Apr 3 at 0:24













21












21








21


2



$begingroup$


In the spirit of the What is a Word™/Phrase™ series started by JLee, a special brand of Phrase™ and Word™ puzzles.




If a word conforms to a special rule, I call it a Samsaran Word™.

Use the examples below to find the rule.



$$
% set Title text. (spaces around the text ARE important; do not remove.)
% increase Pad value only if your entries are longer than the title bar.
%
defPadP1.0 defTitletextbf Samsaran
%
defS#1#2Space#120px#2pxdefP#1V#1em defV#1S#19
defTTitletextbfWords^;!™PaddefNTPadtextbfNotT displaystyle
smashlower29pxbbox[yellow]phantomrlaprubio.2018.03.05S6px0
beginarrayccPadT&NT\endarrayatopdefV#1S#15
beginarrayhlinePadT&NT\hline
%
textPIPELINE&textCONDUIT\ hline
textAVERAGE&textMEDIOCRE\ hline
textITEMIZE&textENUMERATE\ hline
textACCEPTABLE&textADEQUATE\ hline
textINHABITANT&textRESIDENT\ hline
textANTEJURAMENTUM&textPLEA\ hline
textLIVELINESS&textZESTINESS\ hline
textSPOKESWOMEN&textSPOKESMEN\ hline
textUNINSULTING&textRESPECTFUL\ hline
textVIOLATIONAL&textREBELLIOUS\ hline
textANTICAPITALIST&textCOMMUNIST\ hline
textWEATHER-BEATEN&textDILAPIDATED\ hline
hline
endarray$$



Or, in a CSV:



SAMSARAN Words™,Not SAMSARAN Words™
PIPELINE, CONDUIT
AVERAGE, MEDIOCRE
ITEMIZE, ENUMERATE
ACCEPTABLE, ADEQUATE
INHABITANT, RESIDENT
ANTEJURAMENTUM, PLEA
LIVELINESS, ZESTINESS
SPOKESWOMEN, SPOKESMEN
UNINSULTING, RESPECTFUL
VIOLATIONAL, REBELLIOUS
ANTICAPITALIST, COMMUNIST
WEATHER-BEATEN, DILAPIDATED


These are not the only examples of Samsaran Words™, many more exist.



What makes a word Samsaran?










share|improve this question











$endgroup$




In the spirit of the What is a Word™/Phrase™ series started by JLee, a special brand of Phrase™ and Word™ puzzles.




If a word conforms to a special rule, I call it a Samsaran Word™.

Use the examples below to find the rule.



$$
% set Title text. (spaces around the text ARE important; do not remove.)
% increase Pad value only if your entries are longer than the title bar.
%
defPadP1.0 defTitletextbf Samsaran
%
defS#1#2Space#120px#2pxdefP#1V#1em defV#1S#19
defTTitletextbfWords^;!™PaddefNTPadtextbfNotT displaystyle
smashlower29pxbbox[yellow]phantomrlaprubio.2018.03.05S6px0
beginarrayccPadT&NT\endarrayatopdefV#1S#15
beginarrayhlinePadT&NT\hline
%
textPIPELINE&textCONDUIT\ hline
textAVERAGE&textMEDIOCRE\ hline
textITEMIZE&textENUMERATE\ hline
textACCEPTABLE&textADEQUATE\ hline
textINHABITANT&textRESIDENT\ hline
textANTEJURAMENTUM&textPLEA\ hline
textLIVELINESS&textZESTINESS\ hline
textSPOKESWOMEN&textSPOKESMEN\ hline
textUNINSULTING&textRESPECTFUL\ hline
textVIOLATIONAL&textREBELLIOUS\ hline
textANTICAPITALIST&textCOMMUNIST\ hline
textWEATHER-BEATEN&textDILAPIDATED\ hline
hline
endarray$$



Or, in a CSV:



SAMSARAN Words™,Not SAMSARAN Words™
PIPELINE, CONDUIT
AVERAGE, MEDIOCRE
ITEMIZE, ENUMERATE
ACCEPTABLE, ADEQUATE
INHABITANT, RESIDENT
ANTEJURAMENTUM, PLEA
LIVELINESS, ZESTINESS
SPOKESWOMEN, SPOKESMEN
UNINSULTING, RESPECTFUL
VIOLATIONAL, REBELLIOUS
ANTICAPITALIST, COMMUNIST
WEATHER-BEATEN, DILAPIDATED


These are not the only examples of Samsaran Words™, many more exist.



What makes a word Samsaran?







pattern language word-property






share|improve this question















share|improve this question













share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited Apr 2 at 19:03









Rubio

30.5k567188




30.5k567188










asked Apr 2 at 18:16









Conor O'BrienConor O'Brien

1,7601240




1,7601240







  • 2




    $begingroup$
    I had no idea, but when I looked at the answer, I was definitely impressed! $(+1)$
    $endgroup$
    – user477343
    Apr 3 at 0:24












  • 2




    $begingroup$
    I had no idea, but when I looked at the answer, I was definitely impressed! $(+1)$
    $endgroup$
    – user477343
    Apr 3 at 0:24







2




2




$begingroup$
I had no idea, but when I looked at the answer, I was definitely impressed! $(+1)$
$endgroup$
– user477343
Apr 3 at 0:24




$begingroup$
I had no idea, but when I looked at the answer, I was definitely impressed! $(+1)$
$endgroup$
– user477343
Apr 3 at 0:24










2 Answers
2






active

oldest

votes


















17












$begingroup$

Key:




It's in the vowels




Explanation:




Samsara words contain multiple sets of vowels which are repeated:
pIpElInE (IE-IE), AvErAgE (AE-AE), spOkEswOmEn (OE-OE), AntEjUrAmEntUm (AEU-AEU), AntIcApItAlIst (AI-AI-AI) etc.




Note:




As @el-guest pointed out, some of the non-samsaran words also fit this pattern (adequate, dilapidated), but they contain other vowels that are not repeated. Samsaran words contain exclusively repeated vowels.




Title:




Perhaps they are called Samsara words because Samsara is a repeated cycle of birth and death







share|improve this answer











$endgroup$








  • 4




    $begingroup$
    Great answer! But adequate and dilapidated also follow your rule....
    $endgroup$
    – El-Guest
    Apr 2 at 19:31






  • 2




    $begingroup$
    @El-Guest Adequate and Dilapidated have additional vowels as well (not exclusively the repeated vowels)
    $endgroup$
    – omzrs
    Apr 2 at 19:32







  • 2




    $begingroup$
    wEAthEr-bEAtEn does not follow the same pattern, because there is a 'th' between the first one, and only a 't' between the second EA_E.
    $endgroup$
    – El-Guest
    Apr 2 at 19:39






  • 1




    $begingroup$
    Also, anticapitalist has A _ _ I ... A _ I .. A _ I. Spacing is different again?
    $endgroup$
    – El-Guest
    Apr 2 at 19:41






  • 2




    $begingroup$
    @El-Guest oh! Thanks, I hadn't noticed that. Clearly I was too specific in saying that the spacing needed to be equal. I'll remove it from my answer
    $endgroup$
    – omzrs
    Apr 2 at 19:42



















8












$begingroup$

I think the answer is that:




Every vowel of a Samsaran word occurs in the word more than once.




This allows the corner case




Weather-Beaten, which contains 4 Es and two As.




Also, the word Samsaran is itself a Samsaran word (kinda... more on that below).




I phrased my answer this way in order not to specify the number of vowels required. Why, you may ask?




Funnily enough,




The condition "is a Samsaran word" is not completely defined. Must there be two or more vowels? There are no counterexamples to prove it, and no examples preclude it... Is "book" a Samsaran word? For that matter, is "tsktsks" a Samsaran word?




I didn't mean to swoop User omzrs' answer. I arrived at my solution independently, then looked at the spoilers on that answer, only to find that I had been beaten by about 6 hours. However, I posted mine because I felt I had a more precise definition and something important to add to the discussion.






share|improve this answer











$endgroup$








  • 2




    $begingroup$
    This is actually a clever and very clean solution! +1
    $endgroup$
    – El-Guest
    Apr 3 at 3:17






  • 1




    $begingroup$
    @El-Guest Why, thank you!
    $endgroup$
    – user45266
    Apr 3 at 3:20











Your Answer








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2 Answers
2






active

oldest

votes








2 Answers
2






active

oldest

votes









active

oldest

votes






active

oldest

votes









17












$begingroup$

Key:




It's in the vowels




Explanation:




Samsara words contain multiple sets of vowels which are repeated:
pIpElInE (IE-IE), AvErAgE (AE-AE), spOkEswOmEn (OE-OE), AntEjUrAmEntUm (AEU-AEU), AntIcApItAlIst (AI-AI-AI) etc.




Note:




As @el-guest pointed out, some of the non-samsaran words also fit this pattern (adequate, dilapidated), but they contain other vowels that are not repeated. Samsaran words contain exclusively repeated vowels.




Title:




Perhaps they are called Samsara words because Samsara is a repeated cycle of birth and death







share|improve this answer











$endgroup$








  • 4




    $begingroup$
    Great answer! But adequate and dilapidated also follow your rule....
    $endgroup$
    – El-Guest
    Apr 2 at 19:31






  • 2




    $begingroup$
    @El-Guest Adequate and Dilapidated have additional vowels as well (not exclusively the repeated vowels)
    $endgroup$
    – omzrs
    Apr 2 at 19:32







  • 2




    $begingroup$
    wEAthEr-bEAtEn does not follow the same pattern, because there is a 'th' between the first one, and only a 't' between the second EA_E.
    $endgroup$
    – El-Guest
    Apr 2 at 19:39






  • 1




    $begingroup$
    Also, anticapitalist has A _ _ I ... A _ I .. A _ I. Spacing is different again?
    $endgroup$
    – El-Guest
    Apr 2 at 19:41






  • 2




    $begingroup$
    @El-Guest oh! Thanks, I hadn't noticed that. Clearly I was too specific in saying that the spacing needed to be equal. I'll remove it from my answer
    $endgroup$
    – omzrs
    Apr 2 at 19:42
















17












$begingroup$

Key:




It's in the vowels




Explanation:




Samsara words contain multiple sets of vowels which are repeated:
pIpElInE (IE-IE), AvErAgE (AE-AE), spOkEswOmEn (OE-OE), AntEjUrAmEntUm (AEU-AEU), AntIcApItAlIst (AI-AI-AI) etc.




Note:




As @el-guest pointed out, some of the non-samsaran words also fit this pattern (adequate, dilapidated), but they contain other vowels that are not repeated. Samsaran words contain exclusively repeated vowels.




Title:




Perhaps they are called Samsara words because Samsara is a repeated cycle of birth and death







share|improve this answer











$endgroup$








  • 4




    $begingroup$
    Great answer! But adequate and dilapidated also follow your rule....
    $endgroup$
    – El-Guest
    Apr 2 at 19:31






  • 2




    $begingroup$
    @El-Guest Adequate and Dilapidated have additional vowels as well (not exclusively the repeated vowels)
    $endgroup$
    – omzrs
    Apr 2 at 19:32







  • 2




    $begingroup$
    wEAthEr-bEAtEn does not follow the same pattern, because there is a 'th' between the first one, and only a 't' between the second EA_E.
    $endgroup$
    – El-Guest
    Apr 2 at 19:39






  • 1




    $begingroup$
    Also, anticapitalist has A _ _ I ... A _ I .. A _ I. Spacing is different again?
    $endgroup$
    – El-Guest
    Apr 2 at 19:41






  • 2




    $begingroup$
    @El-Guest oh! Thanks, I hadn't noticed that. Clearly I was too specific in saying that the spacing needed to be equal. I'll remove it from my answer
    $endgroup$
    – omzrs
    Apr 2 at 19:42














17












17








17





$begingroup$

Key:




It's in the vowels




Explanation:




Samsara words contain multiple sets of vowels which are repeated:
pIpElInE (IE-IE), AvErAgE (AE-AE), spOkEswOmEn (OE-OE), AntEjUrAmEntUm (AEU-AEU), AntIcApItAlIst (AI-AI-AI) etc.




Note:




As @el-guest pointed out, some of the non-samsaran words also fit this pattern (adequate, dilapidated), but they contain other vowels that are not repeated. Samsaran words contain exclusively repeated vowels.




Title:




Perhaps they are called Samsara words because Samsara is a repeated cycle of birth and death







share|improve this answer











$endgroup$



Key:




It's in the vowels




Explanation:




Samsara words contain multiple sets of vowels which are repeated:
pIpElInE (IE-IE), AvErAgE (AE-AE), spOkEswOmEn (OE-OE), AntEjUrAmEntUm (AEU-AEU), AntIcApItAlIst (AI-AI-AI) etc.




Note:




As @el-guest pointed out, some of the non-samsaran words also fit this pattern (adequate, dilapidated), but they contain other vowels that are not repeated. Samsaran words contain exclusively repeated vowels.




Title:




Perhaps they are called Samsara words because Samsara is a repeated cycle of birth and death








share|improve this answer














share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer








edited Apr 3 at 0:45

























answered Apr 2 at 19:28









omzrsomzrs

61918




61918







  • 4




    $begingroup$
    Great answer! But adequate and dilapidated also follow your rule....
    $endgroup$
    – El-Guest
    Apr 2 at 19:31






  • 2




    $begingroup$
    @El-Guest Adequate and Dilapidated have additional vowels as well (not exclusively the repeated vowels)
    $endgroup$
    – omzrs
    Apr 2 at 19:32







  • 2




    $begingroup$
    wEAthEr-bEAtEn does not follow the same pattern, because there is a 'th' between the first one, and only a 't' between the second EA_E.
    $endgroup$
    – El-Guest
    Apr 2 at 19:39






  • 1




    $begingroup$
    Also, anticapitalist has A _ _ I ... A _ I .. A _ I. Spacing is different again?
    $endgroup$
    – El-Guest
    Apr 2 at 19:41






  • 2




    $begingroup$
    @El-Guest oh! Thanks, I hadn't noticed that. Clearly I was too specific in saying that the spacing needed to be equal. I'll remove it from my answer
    $endgroup$
    – omzrs
    Apr 2 at 19:42













  • 4




    $begingroup$
    Great answer! But adequate and dilapidated also follow your rule....
    $endgroup$
    – El-Guest
    Apr 2 at 19:31






  • 2




    $begingroup$
    @El-Guest Adequate and Dilapidated have additional vowels as well (not exclusively the repeated vowels)
    $endgroup$
    – omzrs
    Apr 2 at 19:32







  • 2




    $begingroup$
    wEAthEr-bEAtEn does not follow the same pattern, because there is a 'th' between the first one, and only a 't' between the second EA_E.
    $endgroup$
    – El-Guest
    Apr 2 at 19:39






  • 1




    $begingroup$
    Also, anticapitalist has A _ _ I ... A _ I .. A _ I. Spacing is different again?
    $endgroup$
    – El-Guest
    Apr 2 at 19:41






  • 2




    $begingroup$
    @El-Guest oh! Thanks, I hadn't noticed that. Clearly I was too specific in saying that the spacing needed to be equal. I'll remove it from my answer
    $endgroup$
    – omzrs
    Apr 2 at 19:42








4




4




$begingroup$
Great answer! But adequate and dilapidated also follow your rule....
$endgroup$
– El-Guest
Apr 2 at 19:31




$begingroup$
Great answer! But adequate and dilapidated also follow your rule....
$endgroup$
– El-Guest
Apr 2 at 19:31




2




2




$begingroup$
@El-Guest Adequate and Dilapidated have additional vowels as well (not exclusively the repeated vowels)
$endgroup$
– omzrs
Apr 2 at 19:32





$begingroup$
@El-Guest Adequate and Dilapidated have additional vowels as well (not exclusively the repeated vowels)
$endgroup$
– omzrs
Apr 2 at 19:32





2




2




$begingroup$
wEAthEr-bEAtEn does not follow the same pattern, because there is a 'th' between the first one, and only a 't' between the second EA_E.
$endgroup$
– El-Guest
Apr 2 at 19:39




$begingroup$
wEAthEr-bEAtEn does not follow the same pattern, because there is a 'th' between the first one, and only a 't' between the second EA_E.
$endgroup$
– El-Guest
Apr 2 at 19:39




1




1




$begingroup$
Also, anticapitalist has A _ _ I ... A _ I .. A _ I. Spacing is different again?
$endgroup$
– El-Guest
Apr 2 at 19:41




$begingroup$
Also, anticapitalist has A _ _ I ... A _ I .. A _ I. Spacing is different again?
$endgroup$
– El-Guest
Apr 2 at 19:41




2




2




$begingroup$
@El-Guest oh! Thanks, I hadn't noticed that. Clearly I was too specific in saying that the spacing needed to be equal. I'll remove it from my answer
$endgroup$
– omzrs
Apr 2 at 19:42





$begingroup$
@El-Guest oh! Thanks, I hadn't noticed that. Clearly I was too specific in saying that the spacing needed to be equal. I'll remove it from my answer
$endgroup$
– omzrs
Apr 2 at 19:42












8












$begingroup$

I think the answer is that:




Every vowel of a Samsaran word occurs in the word more than once.




This allows the corner case




Weather-Beaten, which contains 4 Es and two As.




Also, the word Samsaran is itself a Samsaran word (kinda... more on that below).




I phrased my answer this way in order not to specify the number of vowels required. Why, you may ask?




Funnily enough,




The condition "is a Samsaran word" is not completely defined. Must there be two or more vowels? There are no counterexamples to prove it, and no examples preclude it... Is "book" a Samsaran word? For that matter, is "tsktsks" a Samsaran word?




I didn't mean to swoop User omzrs' answer. I arrived at my solution independently, then looked at the spoilers on that answer, only to find that I had been beaten by about 6 hours. However, I posted mine because I felt I had a more precise definition and something important to add to the discussion.






share|improve this answer











$endgroup$








  • 2




    $begingroup$
    This is actually a clever and very clean solution! +1
    $endgroup$
    – El-Guest
    Apr 3 at 3:17






  • 1




    $begingroup$
    @El-Guest Why, thank you!
    $endgroup$
    – user45266
    Apr 3 at 3:20















8












$begingroup$

I think the answer is that:




Every vowel of a Samsaran word occurs in the word more than once.




This allows the corner case




Weather-Beaten, which contains 4 Es and two As.




Also, the word Samsaran is itself a Samsaran word (kinda... more on that below).




I phrased my answer this way in order not to specify the number of vowels required. Why, you may ask?




Funnily enough,




The condition "is a Samsaran word" is not completely defined. Must there be two or more vowels? There are no counterexamples to prove it, and no examples preclude it... Is "book" a Samsaran word? For that matter, is "tsktsks" a Samsaran word?




I didn't mean to swoop User omzrs' answer. I arrived at my solution independently, then looked at the spoilers on that answer, only to find that I had been beaten by about 6 hours. However, I posted mine because I felt I had a more precise definition and something important to add to the discussion.






share|improve this answer











$endgroup$








  • 2




    $begingroup$
    This is actually a clever and very clean solution! +1
    $endgroup$
    – El-Guest
    Apr 3 at 3:17






  • 1




    $begingroup$
    @El-Guest Why, thank you!
    $endgroup$
    – user45266
    Apr 3 at 3:20













8












8








8





$begingroup$

I think the answer is that:




Every vowel of a Samsaran word occurs in the word more than once.




This allows the corner case




Weather-Beaten, which contains 4 Es and two As.




Also, the word Samsaran is itself a Samsaran word (kinda... more on that below).




I phrased my answer this way in order not to specify the number of vowels required. Why, you may ask?




Funnily enough,




The condition "is a Samsaran word" is not completely defined. Must there be two or more vowels? There are no counterexamples to prove it, and no examples preclude it... Is "book" a Samsaran word? For that matter, is "tsktsks" a Samsaran word?




I didn't mean to swoop User omzrs' answer. I arrived at my solution independently, then looked at the spoilers on that answer, only to find that I had been beaten by about 6 hours. However, I posted mine because I felt I had a more precise definition and something important to add to the discussion.






share|improve this answer











$endgroup$



I think the answer is that:




Every vowel of a Samsaran word occurs in the word more than once.




This allows the corner case




Weather-Beaten, which contains 4 Es and two As.




Also, the word Samsaran is itself a Samsaran word (kinda... more on that below).




I phrased my answer this way in order not to specify the number of vowels required. Why, you may ask?




Funnily enough,




The condition "is a Samsaran word" is not completely defined. Must there be two or more vowels? There are no counterexamples to prove it, and no examples preclude it... Is "book" a Samsaran word? For that matter, is "tsktsks" a Samsaran word?




I didn't mean to swoop User omzrs' answer. I arrived at my solution independently, then looked at the spoilers on that answer, only to find that I had been beaten by about 6 hours. However, I posted mine because I felt I had a more precise definition and something important to add to the discussion.







share|improve this answer














share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer








edited Apr 3 at 3:23

























answered Apr 3 at 2:22









user45266user45266

32514




32514







  • 2




    $begingroup$
    This is actually a clever and very clean solution! +1
    $endgroup$
    – El-Guest
    Apr 3 at 3:17






  • 1




    $begingroup$
    @El-Guest Why, thank you!
    $endgroup$
    – user45266
    Apr 3 at 3:20












  • 2




    $begingroup$
    This is actually a clever and very clean solution! +1
    $endgroup$
    – El-Guest
    Apr 3 at 3:17






  • 1




    $begingroup$
    @El-Guest Why, thank you!
    $endgroup$
    – user45266
    Apr 3 at 3:20







2




2




$begingroup$
This is actually a clever and very clean solution! +1
$endgroup$
– El-Guest
Apr 3 at 3:17




$begingroup$
This is actually a clever and very clean solution! +1
$endgroup$
– El-Guest
Apr 3 at 3:17




1




1




$begingroup$
@El-Guest Why, thank you!
$endgroup$
– user45266
Apr 3 at 3:20




$begingroup$
@El-Guest Why, thank you!
$endgroup$
– user45266
Apr 3 at 3:20

















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