Pangramm-Sammlung, Teil 1

[Von mir im Mai 1996 in de.etc.sprache.deutsch geschrieben.]

Aus dem (für an Geheimschriften interessierte) sehr empfehlenswerten Buch:

F. L. Bauer: Kryptologie. Springer-Verlag Berlin usw. 1993 (ISBN 3-540-56356-3)
stammt folgendes:

[Beginn Zitat]

Echte Pangramme sind Sätze, die jeden Buchstaben genau einmal enthalten. Im Deutschen ist kein echtes Pangramm bekannt, gute Approximationen sind

Im Englischen sind Pangramme in sehr freier Sprache möglich, etwa: Gute Approximationen sind Bekannt sind seit langem die Testtexte für Fernschreibverbindungen

[Ende Zitat]

Etwas besser wird's noch, wenn man bayerisch durch bayrisch ersetzt. Zur Erinnerung nochmal die in dieser Gruppe [= de.etc.sprache.deutsch] gesammelten Vorschläge:

Optimierungen sind noch möglich - man kann sich damit unsterblichen Ruhm erwerben.


Pangramm-Digest aus verschiedenen News-Gruppen


Newsgroups: de.comp.sys.next
From: Henrik Hempelmann
Subject: Re: F: Deutscher Satz mit ALLEN Buchstaben?
Date: Thu, 9 Dec 1993 09:17:02 GMT

Gerhard Moeller writes:

>kennt jemand von Euch einen Satz mit ALLEN 26 (evtl. sogar mit den
>Umlauten?) Buchstaben in deutsch? So etwas wie "the quick brown fox..."
>suche ich fuer eine Uebersetzung...

"ein wackerer bayer vertilgt jeden tag bequem zwo pfund scheinshaxe"

ein bisschen lang,
	Henrik

From: Stefan Taxhet
Newsgroups: de.comp.sys.next
Subject: Re: F: Deutscher Satz mit ALLEN Buchstaben?
Date: 9 Dec 1993 18:42:05 +0100

Gerhard Moeller wrote:
>kennt jemand von Euch einen Satz mit ALLEN 26 (evtl. sogar mit den
>Umlauten?) Buchstaben in deutsch? So etwas wie "the quick brown fox..."

Wie waere es mit:
	Zw\"olf s\"u\"se Boxk\"ampfer jagten quer durch Vinyl.

From: Michael Schwuchow
Newsgroups: de.etc.sprache.deutsch
Subject: Re: Satz mit allen Buchstaben
Date: 28 May 96 15:34:10 GMT

falsches üben von xylophonmusik quält jeden größeren zwerg.

From: Otto Stolz
Newsgroups: de.etc.sprache.deutsch
Subject: Re: Satz mit allen Buchstaben
Date: 29 May 96 11:05:54 GMT

Klaus Pommerening wrote:
> Erinnerung nochmal die in dieser Gruppe gesammelten Vorschläge:
> - ein wackerer bayer vertilgt jeden tag bequem zwo pfund schweinshaxe  
> (Henrik Hempelmann, 58 Buchstaben)

Dieser Satz war vor Jahren im Kreuzworträtsel des ZEITmagazins in
folgender Fassung:
  Ein wackerer Bayer vertilgt ja bequem zwo Pfund Kalbshaxe.
Das sind nur 49 Buchstaben, allerdings weder Umlaute noch Eszet.
Deshalb gefällt mir der Xylophon übende Zwerg besser.

Newsgroups: de.etc.sprache.deutsch
From: Gernot Zander
Subject: Re: Satz mit allen Buchstaben
Date: Thu, 30 May 1996 15:17:01 GMT

Schueler wrote:

> hier nicht zu schreiben ;-)) der bekannte englische Beispielsatz
> "the quick brown fox jumps over the lazy dog"

Im Osten tippten die Fernschreiber immer
"kaufen sie jede woche vier gute bequeme pelze xy",
ich habe hier vor ein paar Wochen aber den wohl westlichen
Satz gelesen, der auch das xy enthielt... Habe ihn nur
wieder vergessen...

From: Dr. Peter Kittel
Subject: Re: Satz mit allen Buchstaben
Newsgroups: de.etc.sprache.deutsch
Date: 6 Jun 96 02:16:08 MEZ

Klaus Pommerening writes:
>Schueler writes:
># ... der bekannte englische Beispielsatz
># "the quick brown fox jumps over the lazy dog"
># allmaehlich zu nerven beginnt, wollte ich mal fragen, ob jemand
># vielleicht
># ein deutsches Pendant dazu weisz.  Gern auch mit Umlauten und sz!
># 
>Dies wurde mal vor einiger Zeit in de.comp.sys.next (!) diskutiert. Hier  
>meine Zusammenfassung:

Von meiner Mutter habe ich folgenden (die Umlaute fehlen allerdings):

Bei jedem klugen Wort von Sokrates rief Xanthippe zynisch: Quatsch!

Subject: Re: Satz mit allen Buchstaben des ABC's
From: Dirk Wirsbitzki
Date: Tue, 17 Mar 1998 10:58:40 +0100
Newsgroups: de.etc.sprache.deutsch

Tassilo Halbritter wrote:
> >Ich glaube es gbit da einen Satz, der alle Buchtstaben des
> >Alphabets enthält, aber keinen doppelt.

Recht amuesant:

Franz jagt im total versifften Taxi quer durch Bayern.

Subject: Re: off-topic (?) Satz mit allen Buchstaben des ABC's
From: Aran Kuntze
Date: Sat, 14 Mar 1998 23:22:17 +0100
Newsgroups: de.etc.sprache.deutsch

Manfred Beckers schrieb/wrote ...
> Sorry, wenn ich off-topic bin, oder die ng als Auskunftsböro
> missbrauche, aber ich hab da mal ne Frage:
> 
> Ich glaube es gbit da einen Satz, der alle Buchtstaben des
> Alphabets enthält, aber keinen doppelt.

Einen deutschen? Da muß ich passen.

Englische kann ich ein paar posten:

  Quartz glyph job vex'd cwm finks. 
    (6 words?, 26 letters)

  Cwm, fjord-bank glyphs vext quiz. 
    (6 words, 26 letters, Dmitri Borgmann)

  Using words in 9C and NI3:
  Veldt jynx grimps waqf zho buck. 
    (6 words, 26 letters, Michael Jones)

  Using words in 9C, NI3 and NI3+:
  Squdgy fez, blank jimp crwth vox. 
    (6 words, 26 letters, Claude Shannon)

  Using words in 9C, NI3, NI2 and NI2+:
  Phlegms fyrd wuz qvint jackbox. 
    (5 words, 26 letters, Dmitri Borgmann)

(Anm.: 
     9C  - Merriam-Webster's Ninth New Collegiate Dictionary, 1986
     NI3 - Merriam-Webster's Third New International Dictionary, 1961
     NI2 - Merriam-Webster's New International Dictionary, Second                       
           Edition, 1935
     '+' indicates obsolete, dialectical, slang, or otherwise           
     substandard word.)

Quelle: rec.puzzles FAQ

Subject: Re: Satz mit allen Buchstaben des ABC's
From: Ulrich Bessler
Date: Thu, 19 Mar 1998 11:00:58 +0100
Newsgroups: de.etc.sprache.deutsch

Manfred Beckers wrote:
> Sorry, wenn ich off-topic bin, oder die ng als Auskunftsböro
> missbrauche, aber ich hab da mal ne Frage:
> Ich glaube es gbit da einen Satz, der alle Buchtstaben des
> Alphabets enthÙlt, aber keinen doppelt.

Also keinen doppelt...? Schier unglaublich. War's vielleicht

"Zwölf Boxkämpfer jagten Viktor quer über den Sylter Deich"?

Subject: Re: Satz mit allen Buchstaben des ABC's
From: Patrick Kling
Date: Fri, 20 Mar 1998 15:32:55 GMT
Newsgroups: de.etc.sprache.deutsch

Christian Wetzel wrote:

>> > Franz jagt im total versifften Taxi quer durch Bayern.
>Aber Du hast recht; es fehlen Buchstaben, nämlich
>"k", "p" und "w".

Franz jagt im komplett verwahrlosten Taxi quer durch Bayern.

Dieser Satz stammt übrigens aus der Win95-Schriftenverwaltung.

Subject: Re: S: Satz mit allen Buchstaben
From: Dr. Peter Kittel
Date: Tue, 14 Jul 1998 02:35:37 +0200
Newsgroups: de.etc.sprache.deutsch

Alexander Senne writes:
>
>ich suche das deutsche Äquivalent zum englischen "The quick red fox jumps  
>over the lazy brown dog." (und ähnlichen), das möglichst auch alle Umlaute  
>enthalten sollte.

Zwölf Boxkämpfer jagten Victor quer über den großen Sylter Deich.

Subject: Re: S: Satz mit allen Buchstaben
From: Johannes Grimm
Date: Tue, 14 Jul 1998 13:29:00 +0200
Newsgroups: de.etc.sprache.deutsch

Danke! Das fand ich sehr interessant.
Lustigerweise leite ich im AUENLAND, einem Postspielheft, das zu einem
grossen Teil Wort-, Literatur- und Sprachspiele anbietet, seit rund 5
Jahren das Spiel "Worteknobeln", bei dem vor etwa 4 Jahren mal eine
Aufgabe gestellt wurde, bei der es um eben diese Pangramme ging:

KP> Im Deutschen ist kein echtes Pangramm bekannt, gute Approximationen sind
KP>  - sylvia wagt quick den jux bei pforzheim (33 Zeichen),
KP>  - bayerische jagdwitze von maxl querkopf (34 Zeichen) und
KP>  - zwei boxkaempfer jagen eva quer durch sylt (36 Zeichen).

Damals gelang einem Mitspieler als beste Loesung:

Barfuss und quick jagt Hexe mit Zyklops VW. (34 Buchstaben)

Und dieser Satz enthaelt sogar noch das ss (sz)!

From: Bert Knupp
To: Klaus Pommerening
Subject: Versprochene Pangramme
Date: Wed, 31 May 2000 20:03:38 -0500

Viele Beispiele von kürzeren Pangramme, die gelegentlich auftauchen, sind
m.E. höchst fragwürdig, zumal sie öfters walisische Wörter beinhalten, die
nicht in wildester Phantasie im englischen Sprachbereich hineinpassen.  Wenn
man im Deutschen zum Beispiel Wörter aus Nachbarländern (tschechische,
dänische, französische, polnische, usw.) konnte man zweifellos mehr
schwierige Buchstaben auffressen.  That's not fair.

Nun aber zur Sache.

These pangrams were assembled by David Lemon, of Adobe Systems, and
reprinted in the "Spectrum Newsletter", the house organ of Spectrum
Multilanguage Communications of New York City, in about 1997.  They are
shown in ascending order of length.
----------------------------------

Sphynx of black quartz, judge my vow.  (29 letters)
Quick zephyrs blow, vexing daft Jim.
Waltz, nymph, for quick jigs vex Bud.
Jackdaws love my big sphinx of quartz.
Pack my box with five dozen liquor jugs.
Mix Zapf with Veljovic and get quirky Beziers.*
Puzzled women bequeath jerks very exotic gifts.
July earthquakes confound zany experimental vow.
Viewing quizzical abstracts mixed up hefty jocks.
Five wine experts jokingly quizzed sample Chablis.
Exquisite farm wench gives body jolt to prize stinker.
Six big devils from Japan quickly forgot how to waltz.
Crazy Frederick bought many very exquisite opal jewels.
How razorback-jumping frogs can level six piqued gymnasts!
Sixty zippers were quickly picked from the woven jute bag.
The job of waxing linoleum frequently peeves chintzy kids.
Jack amazed a few girls by dropping the antique onyx vase!
We have just quoted on nine dozen boxes of gray lamp wicks.
May Jo equal the fine record by solving six puzzles a week?
West quickly gave Bert handsome prizes for six juicy plums.
Fred specialized in the job of making very quaint wax toys.
Just keep examining every low bid quoted for zinc etchings.
Freight to me sixty dozen quart jars and twelve black pans.
Verily the dark ex-Jew quit Zionism, preferring the cabala.
We promptly judged antique ivory buckles for the next prize.
The risquÝ gown makes a very brazen exposure of juicy flesh.
Back in June we delivered oxygen equipment of the same size.
How vexing a fumble to drop a jellied zucchini in the quicksand!
While waxing parquet decks, Suez sailors vomit jauntily abaft.
Back in my quaint garden jaunty zinnias vie with flaunting phlox.
Jaded zombies acted quaintly but kept driving their oxen forward.
Six big juicy steaks sizzled in the pan as five workmen left the quarry.
Will Major Douglas be expected to take this true-false quiz very soon?
The jukebox music puzzled a gentle visitor from a quaint valley town.
Just work for improved basic techniques to maximize your typing skill.
A mad boxer shot a quick, gloved jab to the jaw of his dizzy opponent.
Questions of a zealous nature have become by degrees petty waxen jokes.
King Alexander was just partly overcome after quizzing Diogenes in his tub.
The July sun caused a fragment of black pine wax to ooze on the velvet
quilt.
Two hardy boxing kangaroos jet from Sydney to Zanzibar on quicksilver
pinions.
Ebenezer unexpectedly bagged two tranquil aardvarks with his Jiffy vacuum
cleaner.
Fabled reader with jaded, roving eye seized by quickened impulse to expand
budget.
The sex life of the woodchuck is a provocative question for most vertebrate
zoology majors.
Jelly-like above the high wire, six quaking pachyderms kept the climax of
the extravaganza in a dazzling state of flux.
No kidding, Lorenzo called off his trip to visit Mexico City just because
they told him the conquistadors were extinct.
Forsaking monastic tradition, twelve jovial friars gave up their vocation
for a questionable existence on the flying trapeze.
An inspired calligrapher can create pages of beauty using stick ink, quill,
brush, pickaxe, buzz saw, or even strawberry jam.
--------------------------------------

*Developed for a type specimen book by Jonathan Hoefler of The Hoefler Type
Foundry.  The names are those of  fonts named after their type designers.

Subject: Re: The quick brown fox...
From: John Savard
Date: Fri, 11 Aug 2000 01:18:11 GMT
Newsgroups: sci.crypt

On Thu, 10 Aug 2000 wtshaw wrote,
in part:

>Without disputing the chance of the sentence, "The quick brown fox jumps
>over the lazy dog," being observationally illustrated, we know that it
>contains all twenty-six letters we commonly use.

>Requiring the whole alphabet, does anyone know of other alternatives,
>perhaps shorter ones and with no increase in nonsense content?

One somewhat shorter one, but still longer than 26 letters, is:

Pack my box with five dozen liquor jugs.

I remember seeing it in a typefounder's specimen book; I suppose,
though, that the subject matter was considered unsuitable for the
young ladies in typewriting classes.

Subject: Re: The quick brown fox...
From: Mark Scott
Date: Fri, 11 Aug 2000 14:28:24 +0100
Newsgroups: sci.crypt

Jackdaws love my big sphinx of quartz

(I see this previewing some Truetype fonts with Windows 2000).

Subject: Re: The quick brown fox... From: Jose Castejon-Amenedo Date: Fri, 11 Aug 2000 07:20:06 -0700 Newsgroups: sci.crypt Have a look in the following page for a wealth of pangrams. http://einstein.et.tudelft.nl/~arlet/puzzles/sol.cgi/language/english/sentences/pangram wtshaw wrote: > And now for something different: > > Without disputing the chance of the sentence, "The quick brown fox jumps > over the lazy dog," being observationally illustrated, we know that it > contains all twenty-six letters we commonly use. > > Requiring the whole alphabet, does anyone know of other alternatives, > perhaps shorter ones and with no increase in nonsense content? > > Escaping syntax, how about the shortest number of disjointed words that > incorporate the whole alphabet?

Subject: Re: The quick brown fox...
From: MagiconInc
Date: 11 Aug 2000 15:00:14 GMT
Newsgroups: sci.crypt

wtshaw wrote:

> Requiring the whole alphabet, does anyone know of other alternatives,
> perhaps shorter ones and with no increase in nonsense content?

My favourite is:

How quickly daft jumping zebras vex

Paul Magnussen

ubject: Re: The quick brown fox...
From: Mike Brown
Date: Mon, 14 Aug 2000 14:30:28 GMT
Newsgroups: sci.crypt

Anders Thulin wrote:

> wtshaw wrote:
> 
> > Requiring the whole alphabet, does anyone know of other alternatives,
> > perhaps shorter ones and with no increase in nonsense content?
> 
>   You may want to try comp.fonts.  When I was lurking in that newsgroup
> a few years ago, one of the posters had that kind of sentences in
> his signature -- usually a new one every time.
> 
 
Here is my collection, gathered piecemeal over the course of many years,
the original sources long since forgotten.  The first 10 are shorter
than the traditional QBF.  Also included are some examples resuling from
the so-called 'calligraphy' party game, where the object is to construct
'sensible' pangrams including a specified word.
 
Bright vixens jump; dozy fowl quack.
How quickly daft jumping zebras vex.
Quick bright vixens jump a dozy wolf.
Jackdaws love my big sphinx of quartz.
Prize fowl vexed him just by quacking.
Waltz, dumb nymph, for quick jigs vex.
The five boxing wizards jumped quickly.
Brazen old wives fight a quick jumpy ox.
Pack my box with five dozen liquor jugs.
Sympathizing would fix Quaker objectives.
 
The quick brown fox jumps over the lazy dog.
 
Jail zesty vixen who grabbed pay from quack.
Dumpy kibitzer jingles as exchequer overflows.
Brawny gods just flocked up to quiz and vex him.
Martin J Hixeypozer quickly began his first word.
Jim just quit and packed extra bags for Liz Owen.
A large fawn jumped quickly over white zinc boxes.
Many big jackdaws quickly zipped over the fox pen.
The vixen jumped quickly on her foe barking with zeal.
The fox, jaw bleeding, moved quickly, dazing his prey.
Five or six big planes zoomed quickly by the new tower.
The exodus of jazzy pigeons craved by squeamish walkers.
The very bent, jacknifed forms were quizzically perplexing.
Raquets give a quick buzz to sexy players who find jokes lame.
The kingÃs amazingly poised equerry advanced with javelin fixed.
Alfredo just must bring very exciting news to the plaza quickly.
Anxious Paul waved back his pa from the zinc quarry just sighted.
Dance experts would be amazed by his feverish jerking and quaking.
He jokingly removed porcupine quills from a zebraÃs back with wax.
Picking just six quinces, the new farmhand proved strong but lazy.
Now is the time for all quick brown dogs to jump over the lazy fox.
The judo expert grapples quickly, but with zeal, felling seven men.
Using axes, lumberjacks very quickly felled the wizardÃs pine forest.
The brazen jackal querulously attacked a feral vixen, maiming her paw.
Four or five puzzle-box locks can be opened quickly with just magnets.
Xenophobes know unequivocally that magnetization jeopardizes folklore.
The jovial yokel found six zealots praying and backed qualmishly away.
Karate experts bring down victims with just a few amazingly quick chops.
The fabled Quetzal roosted on a mulberry twig, vexing the peevish
 jockey.
Venerable Will played jazz sax 'til 3 o'clock in the morning before
 he quit.
The exiled queen, justly moved, celebrated with a dazzling fireworks
 display.
Despite being haunted by the wizard's jinx, the quartet performed very slickly.
Troubled by the voodoo hex, the jazz men packed their gear and went off
 quickly.
The knowledgeable superintendent amazed us by quickly fixing the five
 pipe joints.
Our sixth earthquake just split five buildings, leaving hazard in its
 stormy wake.
Someone just asking was quite pleased with our gifts of a zebra and a
 clever oryx.
As we explored the gulf of Zanzibar, we quickly moved closer to the
 jutting rocks.
Travelling beneath the azure sky in our jolly ox-cart, we often hit bumps
 quite hard.
Obsequious kowtows with each word are just examples of EzraÃs unctuous
 grovelling ways.
Curious and wily journalists braved the fury of six brazen knaves
 picketing the mad queen.
Their kind aunt was subject to frequent dizzy spells, thus causing much
 anxiety and worry.
After quizzing her, he justly blamed anorexia nervosa as the cause of all
 her known problems.
William said that everything about his jacket was in quite good condition
 except for the zipper.
The daredevils quivered, knowing this rube would commit the faux pas of
 dozing when they jumped.
The junior office clerks were quite amazed at the extra reward given by
 their generous employer. 
The jittery killer immobilised his victim with a wax-filled hypodermic
 syringe, then drove off quickly.
The vegetarian menu included gazpacho, piquant julien beets, rusk rounds
 with yoghourt, and excellent flan.

Calligraphic Pangrams:

Calligraphic wizardry expounds a quiet but rhythmic flow eschewing jerky
 movements.
Justly vexed, the Queen exiled the calligrapher who spattered some black
 ink on her dog.
Five men, using just penknives, would cut the sixty quills needed by a
 dozen calligraphers.
Calligraphy requires just a very few basic needs: pen, ink, dexterity,
 and most of all zeal!
Calligraphers see words as exquisitely moving, subtle thicks and thins,
 of zigzags and joins.
IÃm jealous of any calligrapher who writes with zest, exuberance, freedom
 and unequivocal skill.
He wrote deftly and quickly, just amazing us with his expertise and his
 unabashed love of letters.
Six calligraphers just amazed, watched children busily cutting quills with
 their favourite penknives.

Subject: Re: The quick brown fox...
From: Paul Howard
Date: Tue, 15 Aug 2000 20:53:01 GMT
Newsgroups: sci.crypt

How about this, that I saw a while ago in comp.fonts :

New job: fix Mr. Gluck's hazy TV, PDQ!

Exactly 26 letters! (plus punctuation and capitalization)

Subject: Re: The quick brown fox...
From: Mike Brown
Date: Thu, 17 Aug 2000 09:11:41 GMT
Newsgroups: sci.crypt

Benjamin Goldberg wrote:
 
> > Justly vexed, the Queen exiled the calligrapher who spattered some
> > black ink on her dog.
> 
> This one isn't a pangram, there's no "z" in it!
 
Many thanks, now amended to:
 
  Justly vexed, the Queen exiled the calligrapher who spattered some
  black ink on her dozing dog.

Subject: Re: The quick brown fox...
From: wtshaw
Date: Fri, 18 Aug 2000 14:12:46 -0600
Newsgroups: sci.crypt

Mike Brown wrote:

> Benjamin Goldberg wrote:
>  
> > > Justly vexed, the Queen exiled the calligrapher who spattered some
> > > black ink on her dog.
> > 
> > This one isn't a pangram, there's no "z" in it!
>  
> Many thanks, now amended to:
>  
>   Justly vexed, the Queen exiled the calligrapher who spattered some
>   black ink on her dozing dog.
>  

The gal got really mad:

 Justly vexed, the Queen exiled the calligrapher who spritzed some black
ink on her.

Subject: Re: The quick brown fox...
From: wtshaw
Date: Sat, 19 Aug 2000 22:18:19 -0600
Newsgroups: sci.crypt

Mike Brown wrote:

> Here is my collection, gathered piecemeal over the course of many years,
> the original sources long since forgotten.....

Again, thanks for all who have responded.

In a search for passwords, it seems that distilling down such a sentence
to 26 different characters is one way of generating long but memorable
strings.  A permutation of 26 characters is from a keyspace equivalent to
more than 88 bits.

Surely we know that all sequences would be difficult to generate in this
way, but a sequence could be caesar shifted, and/or displaced in the ascii
set to increase possibilities.

Anyway, having asked, here are some sentences I did myself today.  Never
having tried seriously before to do this sort of thing, I learned it is
habit forming:

  Broach five lumpy quahogs with a junked zax.
  Quiz forgiven lads who jump back over your fix.
  Young frogs jump back quickly if zapped with six volts.
  Vigorously eat quixotic zweibacks, fresh jam, and prunes.

Subject: Crypto Related Pangrams
From: wtshaw
Date: Tue, 12 Sep 2000 19:57:44 -0600

Here are some the pangram bug has caused me to write.  Anyone else want to
write crypto related pangrams.   Wth unlimited subject I have gotten many
in the 30's-40's size range, a few perhaps too offensive to actually post.

42) *Vexed xenophobes fear crypto's jazzy, quaint, works.
42) *Viz: Bold powerful algorthms jinx crypto key quest.
44) *Jerk encryption quite throughly vexes amazed waifs.
45) *Backdoor jazz hypes extremely quiet NSA info viewing.
46) *Quiz every flawed, grumpy, noxious, abject blatherskite. 
47) *Before now, cryptic glyphs vexed Jake's quiet amazed wife.
47) *Fear adjusting public-key numbers to quiz vexed, watched.
49) *Lame vexed xenophobes fear crypto's jazzy, quaint workings.
49) *Vexed xenophobes fear crypto's jazzy, quaint, magical works.
55) *Each solves a major wonderful vexing puzzle, mystery, or book quest.
56) *Mystic glyphs of questionable, exotic, or unknown value just dazzle.
56) *Jack, never fight excitement, wonder, and surprize in your able quest.
57) *Solve Grandview Algorithm by quizzical search for juxtaposed keys.
58) *A checked quisling views both a jinxed and a zero future as a spymaster.

Subject: Re: Crypto Related Pangrams
From: Jim Reeds
Date: Wed, 13 Sep 2000 23:08:52 GMT

For me, the best crypto related pangram is in Latin, &
so uses all 23 of the letters of the Latin alphabet:
"Gaza frequens Libycos duxit Karthago triumphos".  This
was used as an example plaintext by Johannes Trithemius
in his _Steganographia_ of 1499/1500.  The corresponding
cryptogram was not solved until 1676, 1996, and 1998
(by 3 people working independently), so T's idea of hiding
messages steganographically wasn't so shabby.

"Gaza frequens...", like other pangrams, was a common writing
exercise in the middle ages. See: Berhard Bischoff,
``Elementarunterricht und Probationes Pennae in der ersten
Haelfte des Mittelalters,'' appearing in his "Mittelalterliche
Studien: Ausgewaehlte Aufsaetze zur Schriftkunde und
 Literaturgeschichte" (Stuttgart: Anton Hiersemann, 1966),
1:74-87.