I have been
doing several puzzles that involve anagrams.
Anagrams are words made from the same letters. For instance, I could take the letters
E-S-S-T-A. I can make the word “state”
or “taste” from the same letters.
Acronyms are
generally words made up from initials or abbreviations. For example, the National Aeronautics and Space
Administration is more commonly known as NASA. Some acronyms are easy to pronounce as one word while others may not
be.
The word Pemdas, for instance, is
not one that I will recognize right away.
I am more familiar with “Please Excuse My Dear Aunt Sally” which is just
a play on words that might be easier for students to remember than “Parentheses, Exponents,
Multiplication, Division, Addition, and Subtraction” Either way PEDMAS or the “Aunt
Sally” phrase are supposed to help young minds know in which order they are
expected to do a math (specifically algebra) problem (see here).
Acronyms help
allow us to memorize techniques – though they do not work for all people. Likewise, there are some people that will
only see one word with any given set of letters and may not see the other
anagrams that are waiting to be arranged into other words.
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