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What I'm Reading: 'Port Out, Starboard Home and other language myths'

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Edited by Richard Walker, Monday 22 June 2026 at 00:23

The author, Michael Quinion, is a man after my own heart. (I mean because he is an etymologist, he's not looking for a transplant or anything.) His book is really fascinating and a very enjoyable read. I've only read part way through at the minute but when I've finished I'll post a short review. Watch this space!

I'd not heard of this book before and I simply stumbled across when searching for the origin of the phrase 'All at sixes and sevens'.

The phrase is found in Chaucer and Shakespeare with the same meaning as today (to be flummoxed, or in a state of confusion) and from Quinion's book I learned the most probable explanation is that it comes from a dice game where 'sixes and sevens' were proverbially risky bets.

The reason I was looking up the expression is that in my Quora Digest feed the redoubtable Alon Amit answered the question: to prove that for any n we can find a n -digit number which is divisible by two super n (or some greater power) and entirely made up of the digits six and seven

For example today is the 22nd and here is number satisfying those conditions

7777777777666766667776 equals two super 22 multiplication 11 multiplication 47 multiplication 337 multiplication 10643272511

There are other pairs of digits that could be used instead of six and seven but I think the Original Poster probably recalled the phrase 'at sixes and sevens' and thought those numbers would be a good choice. 

If you are interested here is a Python program that implements Amit's algorithm at the end of this post.

# Generates a number with num digits, all 6s or 7, 
# which is divisble by 2^num or some higher power of 2.

def next(n):
    digits = len(str(n))
    if n % 2**(digits + 1):
        return int('7' + str(n))
    else:
      return int('6' + str(n))

num = 22

n = 6
for step in range(1,num):
    n = next(n)
print(n)
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Richard Walker

Word of the day

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Backronym

An acronym is formed from the initial letters in a phrase, and can become a word in its own right. Scuba is a good example, derived from Self Contained Underwater Breathing Apparatus. People like acronyms; they are handy and memorable.

A backronym is the exact opposite. Starting from a word that looks as though it could be an acronym, we reverse engineer an origin, sometimes to be comical, but sometimes because an acronym is suggested that seems plausible and satisfying. And some backronyms  are for serious purpose, as explained here 

https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Backronym

As an example of the plausible type, it’s commonly said that posh comes from Port Out Starboard Home, in the context to sea travel to India, but I don’t believe there is any reliable evidence for this explanation. It always seemed fishy* to me.

A more modern backronym is rap = Rhythm And Poetry, which seems equally unlikely to be true.

And a really funny one is 

* False Information Some Hand You.

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