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™?

Denied boarding although I have proper visa and documentation. To whom should I make a complaint?

Take 2! Is this homebrew Lady of Pain warlock patron balanced?

Is grep documentation about ignoring case wrong, since it doesn't ignore case in filenames?

How could we fake a moon landing now?

What does this Jacques Hadamard quote mean?

AppleTVs create a chatty alternate WiFi network

Can a new player join a group only when a new campaign starts?

How come Sam didn't become Lord of Horn Hill?

Performance gap between bool std:vector and array

Maximum summed subsequences with non-adjacent items

NumericArray versus PackedArray in MMA12

Is there a kind of relay only consumes power when switching?

What is the Characteristic of a local ring?

Fundamental Solution of the Pell Equation

What is a fractional matching?

Is it possible to add Lighting Web Component in the Visual force Page?

Why wasn't DOSKEY integrated with COMMAND.COM?

SF book about people trapped in a series of worlds they imagine

QGIS: how to apply Line Pattern Fill to LineStrings?

The logistics of corpse disposal

How do I use the new nonlinear finite element in Mathematica 12 for this equation?

Is this homebrew Lady of Pain warlock patron balanced?

Physics no longer uses mechanical models to describe phenomena

What are the out-of-universe reasons for the references to Toby Maguire-era Spider-Man in Into the Spider-Verse?



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








StackExchange.ready(function()
var channelOptions =
tags: "".split(" "),
id: "559"
;
initTagRenderer("".split(" "), "".split(" "), channelOptions);

StackExchange.using("externalEditor", function()
// Have to fire editor after snippets, if snippets enabled
if (StackExchange.settings.snippets.snippetsEnabled)
StackExchange.using("snippets", function()
createEditor();
);

else
createEditor();

);

function createEditor()
StackExchange.prepareEditor(
heartbeatType: 'answer',
autoActivateHeartbeat: false,
convertImagesToLinks: false,
noModals: true,
showLowRepImageUploadWarning: true,
reputationToPostImages: null,
bindNavPrevention: true,
postfix: "",
imageUploader:
brandingHtml: "Powered by u003ca class="icon-imgur-white" href="https://imgur.com/"u003eu003c/au003e",
contentPolicyHtml: "User contributions licensed under u003ca href="https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0/"u003ecc by-sa 3.0 with attribution requiredu003c/au003e u003ca href="https://stackoverflow.com/legal/content-policy"u003e(content policy)u003c/au003e",
allowUrls: true
,
noCode: true, onDemand: true,
discardSelector: ".discard-answer"
,immediatelyShowMarkdownHelp:true
);



);













draft saved

draft discarded


















StackExchange.ready(
function ()
StackExchange.openid.initPostLogin('.new-post-login', 'https%3a%2f%2fpuzzling.stackexchange.com%2fquestions%2f81320%2fwhat-is-a-samsaran-word%23new-answer', 'question_page');

);

Post as a guest















Required, but never shown

























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

















draft saved

draft discarded
















































Thanks for contributing an answer to Puzzling Stack Exchange!


  • Please be sure to answer the question. Provide details and share your research!

But avoid


  • Asking for help, clarification, or responding to other answers.

  • Making statements based on opinion; back them up with references or personal experience.

Use MathJax to format equations. MathJax reference.


To learn more, see our tips on writing great answers.




draft saved


draft discarded














StackExchange.ready(
function ()
StackExchange.openid.initPostLogin('.new-post-login', 'https%3a%2f%2fpuzzling.stackexchange.com%2fquestions%2f81320%2fwhat-is-a-samsaran-word%23new-answer', 'question_page');

);

Post as a guest















Required, but never shown





















































Required, but never shown














Required, but never shown












Required, but never shown







Required, but never shown

































Required, but never shown














Required, but never shown












Required, but never shown







Required, but never shown







Popular posts from this blog

Adding axes to figuresAdding axes labels to LaTeX figuresLaTeX equivalent of ConTeXt buffersRotate a node but not its content: the case of the ellipse decorationHow to define the default vertical distance between nodes?TikZ scaling graphic and adjust node position and keep font sizeNumerical conditional within tikz keys?adding axes to shapesAlign axes across subfiguresAdding figures with a certain orderLine up nested tikz enviroments or how to get rid of themAdding axes labels to LaTeX figures

Tähtien Talli Jäsenet | Lähteet | NavigointivalikkoSuomen Hippos – Tähtien Talli

Do these cracks on my tires look bad? The Next CEO of Stack OverflowDry rot tire should I replace?Having to replace tiresFishtailed so easily? Bad tires? ABS?Filling the tires with something other than air, to avoid puncture hassles?Used Michelin tires safe to install?Do these tyre cracks necessitate replacement?Rumbling noise: tires or mechanicalIs it possible to fix noisy feathered tires?Are bad winter tires still better than summer tires in winter?Torque converter failure - Related to replacing only 2 tires?Why use snow tires on all 4 wheels on 2-wheel-drive cars?