An on-line site I use involves daily passwords to gain access. Does anyone know how they come up with such lists of words?
They all seem to be 7 or 8 letters long. It seems as tho an unusually high percentage of them have - um - somewhat negative connotations. At least moreso than I would expect of the English language as a whole. And many of the others just seem somewhat - um - odd.
Here, in no particular order, is one week’s worth of words:
Are these generated by a computer program? Do they impress anyone else as a little odd? Perhaps the only reason they strike me as “odd” is that it is pretty unusual to see so many words of that length together.
But then you’d have to at least somehow “radomize” the resulting alphabetical list, no?
And my non-scientific impression is that the list I’m given seems to be short on the crawfish/daylight end of the vocabulary and overloaded with booberies and emboli …
Well, sure. But randomizing a list is hardly a challenging feat for anyone with basic programming sk1llz. Perl even comes with an efficient shuffle algorithm for that purpose.
And there could certainly be some human filtering of the list after it’s generated, if the human in question only wants to choose “interesting” words.
My old employer used to use a four letter word coupled with a three letter word, apparently because it would not be too long to be hard to remember, but would be harder to crack than the finite universe of 7 or 8 letter words.
Someone realy seems to be trying to set the mood for using this work-related application! :rolleyes: Notably absent are the likes of cerulean, gorilla, racecar, begonia …