Friday morning, 1-17-2014, looking north from the Baltimore Convention Center |
Sunday, January 19, 2014
Poems and primes
Friday, March 4, 2022
Poetry of ideas -- an anagram, a palindrome
Minnestoa math teacher Ben Orlin's website Math with Bad Drawings is a fun place to visit and Orlin often posts on Twitter -- browsing there recently I found this posting:
Wednesday, July 3, 2019
Fighting the heat -- with limericks!
Heated Limerick by Madeleine Begun Kane
One-hundred degrees? I may swoon.
Yes, I’m singing a very hot tune.
And I’m down in the mouth
Cuz this isn’t the south,
But Bayside, New York — early June.
At her long-standing and encyclopedic website, madkane.com, Kane offers lots more limericks -- and instructions for writing a limerick -- and also math-humor.
A wonderful source of math-humor and limericks is Ben Orlin's site, "Math with Bad Drawings." Here is a sample:
A limerick for mathematicians -- by Ben Orlin |
A clever computational limerick -- by Leigh Mercer |
To find limericks previously posted in this blog, use the SEARCH box in the right-hand column OR follow this link.
Monday, November 8, 2021
A Hundred Thousand Billion Poems
Celebrate Raymond Queneau (1903-1976).
In a recent posting, mathy blogger Ben Orlin noted (here in Math with Bad Drawings) that 2021 is the 60th anniversary of an amazing poetry collection, One Hundred Thousand Billion Poems, by Raymond Queneau. The collection consist of 14 sonnets, with each line of each sonnet on a separate strip of paper -- allowing formation of a poem using any of the 14 first lines, any of the 14 second lines, and so on. Here is an link to a earlier blog posting that introduces Queneau's collection and includes and interactive way to create a sonnet from the collection.
Here is a link to other postings from this blog that include Queneau.
Thursday, November 16, 2017
Memorization and formulae
Monday we memorize
That way we know
Tuesday through Friday
We think and we Grow
And, accompanied by a drawing, here are the first two of five stanza for a poem about the quadratic formula:
Thursday, January 24, 2019
A Multi-Author Poem Celebrating Math-People
ideas unfold in space, time, and hearts.
Math is the language of everyone
Any part of everything began as a sum.