What is a Workman Word™?











up vote
10
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favorite












In the spirit of the What is a Word™/Phrase™ series started by JLee, a special brand of Phrase™ and Word™ puzzles.





If a word conforms to a special rule, I call it a Workman Word™.

Use the examples below to find the rule.



$$
% set Title text. (spaces around the text ARE important; do not remove.)
% increase Pad value only if your entries are longer than the title bar.
%
defPad{P{0.0}} defTitle{textbf{ Workman }}
%
defS#1#2{Space{#1}{20px}{#2px}}defP#1{V{#1em}} defV#1{S{#1}{9}}
defT{Titletextbf{Words }^™Pad}defNT{Padtextbf{Not}T }displaystyle
smash{lower{29px}bbox[yellow]{phantom{rlap{rubio.2017.02.04}S{6px}{0}
begin{array}{cc}PadT&NT\end{array}}}}atopdefV#1{S{#1}{5}}
begin{array}{|c|c|}hlinePadT&NT\hline
%
text{ LONE}&text{ WOLF}\ hline
text{ FUEL }&text{ TANK}\ hline
text{ PEE}&text{ URINE}\ hline
text{ FUNNY}&text{ JOKE}\ hline
text{ CONVEYING }&text{ FEELINGS }\ hline
text{ THRASH}&text{ BIN}\ hline
text{ ENJOY}&text{ LIFE}\ hline
text{ INVOKE}&text{ SPELL}\ hline
text{ STRAW}&text{ LAST}\ hline
text{ HARD}&text{ CORE}\ hline
hline
end{array}$$



The CSV version:



Workman Words™,Not Workman Words™
LONE,WOLF
FUEL,TANK
PEE,URINE
FUNNY,JOKE
CONVEYING,FEELINGS
THRASH,BIN
ENJOY,LIFE
INVOKE,SPELL
STRAW,LAST
HARD,CORE


These are not the only examples of Workman Words™; many more exist.



What is the special rule these words conform to?










share|improve this question
























  • CSV is separated by only commas, not commas and spaces. en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Comma-separated_values
    – Nic Hartley
    Nov 26 at 18:12






  • 1




    Did you mean to leave the hint blank? It would be better not to put the hint in that case, because people will be unable to see whether you add a hint without mousing over it each time. That is a cognitively bad habit.
    – piojo
    Nov 27 at 4:52










  • Unless an empty hint is in itself a hint?
    – Yessoan
    Nov 27 at 6:01






  • 1




    @piojo I used a template I saved from before, deleted.
    – JFox
    Nov 27 at 13:53










  • @NicHartley; like what it says here: with the records divided into fields separated by delimiters (typically a single reserved character such as comma, semicolon, or tab; sometimes the delimiter may include optional spaces),?
    – JonMark Perry
    Nov 27 at 13:59















up vote
10
down vote

favorite












In the spirit of the What is a Word™/Phrase™ series started by JLee, a special brand of Phrase™ and Word™ puzzles.





If a word conforms to a special rule, I call it a Workman Word™.

Use the examples below to find the rule.



$$
% set Title text. (spaces around the text ARE important; do not remove.)
% increase Pad value only if your entries are longer than the title bar.
%
defPad{P{0.0}} defTitle{textbf{ Workman }}
%
defS#1#2{Space{#1}{20px}{#2px}}defP#1{V{#1em}} defV#1{S{#1}{9}}
defT{Titletextbf{Words }^™Pad}defNT{Padtextbf{Not}T }displaystyle
smash{lower{29px}bbox[yellow]{phantom{rlap{rubio.2017.02.04}S{6px}{0}
begin{array}{cc}PadT&NT\end{array}}}}atopdefV#1{S{#1}{5}}
begin{array}{|c|c|}hlinePadT&NT\hline
%
text{ LONE}&text{ WOLF}\ hline
text{ FUEL }&text{ TANK}\ hline
text{ PEE}&text{ URINE}\ hline
text{ FUNNY}&text{ JOKE}\ hline
text{ CONVEYING }&text{ FEELINGS }\ hline
text{ THRASH}&text{ BIN}\ hline
text{ ENJOY}&text{ LIFE}\ hline
text{ INVOKE}&text{ SPELL}\ hline
text{ STRAW}&text{ LAST}\ hline
text{ HARD}&text{ CORE}\ hline
hline
end{array}$$



The CSV version:



Workman Words™,Not Workman Words™
LONE,WOLF
FUEL,TANK
PEE,URINE
FUNNY,JOKE
CONVEYING,FEELINGS
THRASH,BIN
ENJOY,LIFE
INVOKE,SPELL
STRAW,LAST
HARD,CORE


These are not the only examples of Workman Words™; many more exist.



What is the special rule these words conform to?










share|improve this question
























  • CSV is separated by only commas, not commas and spaces. en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Comma-separated_values
    – Nic Hartley
    Nov 26 at 18:12






  • 1




    Did you mean to leave the hint blank? It would be better not to put the hint in that case, because people will be unable to see whether you add a hint without mousing over it each time. That is a cognitively bad habit.
    – piojo
    Nov 27 at 4:52










  • Unless an empty hint is in itself a hint?
    – Yessoan
    Nov 27 at 6:01






  • 1




    @piojo I used a template I saved from before, deleted.
    – JFox
    Nov 27 at 13:53










  • @NicHartley; like what it says here: with the records divided into fields separated by delimiters (typically a single reserved character such as comma, semicolon, or tab; sometimes the delimiter may include optional spaces),?
    – JonMark Perry
    Nov 27 at 13:59













up vote
10
down vote

favorite









up vote
10
down vote

favorite











In the spirit of the What is a Word™/Phrase™ series started by JLee, a special brand of Phrase™ and Word™ puzzles.





If a word conforms to a special rule, I call it a Workman Word™.

Use the examples below to find the rule.



$$
% set Title text. (spaces around the text ARE important; do not remove.)
% increase Pad value only if your entries are longer than the title bar.
%
defPad{P{0.0}} defTitle{textbf{ Workman }}
%
defS#1#2{Space{#1}{20px}{#2px}}defP#1{V{#1em}} defV#1{S{#1}{9}}
defT{Titletextbf{Words }^™Pad}defNT{Padtextbf{Not}T }displaystyle
smash{lower{29px}bbox[yellow]{phantom{rlap{rubio.2017.02.04}S{6px}{0}
begin{array}{cc}PadT&NT\end{array}}}}atopdefV#1{S{#1}{5}}
begin{array}{|c|c|}hlinePadT&NT\hline
%
text{ LONE}&text{ WOLF}\ hline
text{ FUEL }&text{ TANK}\ hline
text{ PEE}&text{ URINE}\ hline
text{ FUNNY}&text{ JOKE}\ hline
text{ CONVEYING }&text{ FEELINGS }\ hline
text{ THRASH}&text{ BIN}\ hline
text{ ENJOY}&text{ LIFE}\ hline
text{ INVOKE}&text{ SPELL}\ hline
text{ STRAW}&text{ LAST}\ hline
text{ HARD}&text{ CORE}\ hline
hline
end{array}$$



The CSV version:



Workman Words™,Not Workman Words™
LONE,WOLF
FUEL,TANK
PEE,URINE
FUNNY,JOKE
CONVEYING,FEELINGS
THRASH,BIN
ENJOY,LIFE
INVOKE,SPELL
STRAW,LAST
HARD,CORE


These are not the only examples of Workman Words™; many more exist.



What is the special rule these words conform to?










share|improve this question















In the spirit of the What is a Word™/Phrase™ series started by JLee, a special brand of Phrase™ and Word™ puzzles.





If a word conforms to a special rule, I call it a Workman Word™.

Use the examples below to find the rule.



$$
% set Title text. (spaces around the text ARE important; do not remove.)
% increase Pad value only if your entries are longer than the title bar.
%
defPad{P{0.0}} defTitle{textbf{ Workman }}
%
defS#1#2{Space{#1}{20px}{#2px}}defP#1{V{#1em}} defV#1{S{#1}{9}}
defT{Titletextbf{Words }^™Pad}defNT{Padtextbf{Not}T }displaystyle
smash{lower{29px}bbox[yellow]{phantom{rlap{rubio.2017.02.04}S{6px}{0}
begin{array}{cc}PadT&NT\end{array}}}}atopdefV#1{S{#1}{5}}
begin{array}{|c|c|}hlinePadT&NT\hline
%
text{ LONE}&text{ WOLF}\ hline
text{ FUEL }&text{ TANK}\ hline
text{ PEE}&text{ URINE}\ hline
text{ FUNNY}&text{ JOKE}\ hline
text{ CONVEYING }&text{ FEELINGS }\ hline
text{ THRASH}&text{ BIN}\ hline
text{ ENJOY}&text{ LIFE}\ hline
text{ INVOKE}&text{ SPELL}\ hline
text{ STRAW}&text{ LAST}\ hline
text{ HARD}&text{ CORE}\ hline
hline
end{array}$$



The CSV version:



Workman Words™,Not Workman Words™
LONE,WOLF
FUEL,TANK
PEE,URINE
FUNNY,JOKE
CONVEYING,FEELINGS
THRASH,BIN
ENJOY,LIFE
INVOKE,SPELL
STRAW,LAST
HARD,CORE


These are not the only examples of Workman Words™; many more exist.



What is the special rule these words conform to?







pattern word-property






share|improve this question















share|improve this question













share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited Nov 27 at 13:53

























asked Nov 26 at 16:18









JFox

1,149428




1,149428












  • CSV is separated by only commas, not commas and spaces. en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Comma-separated_values
    – Nic Hartley
    Nov 26 at 18:12






  • 1




    Did you mean to leave the hint blank? It would be better not to put the hint in that case, because people will be unable to see whether you add a hint without mousing over it each time. That is a cognitively bad habit.
    – piojo
    Nov 27 at 4:52










  • Unless an empty hint is in itself a hint?
    – Yessoan
    Nov 27 at 6:01






  • 1




    @piojo I used a template I saved from before, deleted.
    – JFox
    Nov 27 at 13:53










  • @NicHartley; like what it says here: with the records divided into fields separated by delimiters (typically a single reserved character such as comma, semicolon, or tab; sometimes the delimiter may include optional spaces),?
    – JonMark Perry
    Nov 27 at 13:59


















  • CSV is separated by only commas, not commas and spaces. en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Comma-separated_values
    – Nic Hartley
    Nov 26 at 18:12






  • 1




    Did you mean to leave the hint blank? It would be better not to put the hint in that case, because people will be unable to see whether you add a hint without mousing over it each time. That is a cognitively bad habit.
    – piojo
    Nov 27 at 4:52










  • Unless an empty hint is in itself a hint?
    – Yessoan
    Nov 27 at 6:01






  • 1




    @piojo I used a template I saved from before, deleted.
    – JFox
    Nov 27 at 13:53










  • @NicHartley; like what it says here: with the records divided into fields separated by delimiters (typically a single reserved character such as comma, semicolon, or tab; sometimes the delimiter may include optional spaces),?
    – JonMark Perry
    Nov 27 at 13:59
















CSV is separated by only commas, not commas and spaces. en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Comma-separated_values
– Nic Hartley
Nov 26 at 18:12




CSV is separated by only commas, not commas and spaces. en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Comma-separated_values
– Nic Hartley
Nov 26 at 18:12




1




1




Did you mean to leave the hint blank? It would be better not to put the hint in that case, because people will be unable to see whether you add a hint without mousing over it each time. That is a cognitively bad habit.
– piojo
Nov 27 at 4:52




Did you mean to leave the hint blank? It would be better not to put the hint in that case, because people will be unable to see whether you add a hint without mousing over it each time. That is a cognitively bad habit.
– piojo
Nov 27 at 4:52












Unless an empty hint is in itself a hint?
– Yessoan
Nov 27 at 6:01




Unless an empty hint is in itself a hint?
– Yessoan
Nov 27 at 6:01




1




1




@piojo I used a template I saved from before, deleted.
– JFox
Nov 27 at 13:53




@piojo I used a template I saved from before, deleted.
– JFox
Nov 27 at 13:53












@NicHartley; like what it says here: with the records divided into fields separated by delimiters (typically a single reserved character such as comma, semicolon, or tab; sometimes the delimiter may include optional spaces),?
– JonMark Perry
Nov 27 at 13:59




@NicHartley; like what it says here: with the records divided into fields separated by delimiters (typically a single reserved character such as comma, semicolon, or tab; sometimes the delimiter may include optional spaces),?
– JonMark Perry
Nov 27 at 13:59










1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes

















up vote
24
down vote



accepted










I believe...




They're words that can be typed on keys touching one another in a Workman keyboard layout (Pic from Wikipedia):

enter image description here


In contrast, all the non-Workman words don't form an unbroken line on it.







share|improve this answer























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    active

    oldest

    votes









    active

    oldest

    votes






    active

    oldest

    votes








    up vote
    24
    down vote



    accepted










    I believe...




    They're words that can be typed on keys touching one another in a Workman keyboard layout (Pic from Wikipedia):

    enter image description here


    In contrast, all the non-Workman words don't form an unbroken line on it.







    share|improve this answer



























      up vote
      24
      down vote



      accepted










      I believe...




      They're words that can be typed on keys touching one another in a Workman keyboard layout (Pic from Wikipedia):

      enter image description here


      In contrast, all the non-Workman words don't form an unbroken line on it.







      share|improve this answer

























        up vote
        24
        down vote



        accepted







        up vote
        24
        down vote



        accepted






        I believe...




        They're words that can be typed on keys touching one another in a Workman keyboard layout (Pic from Wikipedia):

        enter image description here


        In contrast, all the non-Workman words don't form an unbroken line on it.







        share|improve this answer














        I believe...




        They're words that can be typed on keys touching one another in a Workman keyboard layout (Pic from Wikipedia):

        enter image description here


        In contrast, all the non-Workman words don't form an unbroken line on it.








        share|improve this answer














        share|improve this answer



        share|improve this answer








        edited Nov 26 at 16:34

























        answered Nov 26 at 16:25









        Walt

        5,2391936




        5,2391936






























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