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Defining A Pangram and an Example in a Fun Easter Poem!

  • Mar 30
  • 1 min read

What is a pangram?

A pangram is a sentence that contains every letter of the alphabet at least once. Pangrams are often used in typography, calligraphy, and testing fonts, as they provide a comprehensive representation of the alphabet.

What is an example of a pangram?

An example of a well-known pangram is:

"The quick brown fox jumps over the lazy dog."

This sentence includes all 26 letters of the English alphabet.

The cozy, fluffy Easter bunny jumped over six quick, waxed eggs,

With a twitch of his pink little nose and a stretch of his long, furry legs.

He darted through gardens of jasmine and zipped past the buzzing of bees,

To hide every treasure in patches of clover and under the blossoming trees.

His basket was heavy with silver and gold, all tucked in a velvet-lined bed,

While dreams of a chocolatey, candy-filled morning danced in his whimsical head.

From "A" down to "Z," he left magic behind in the soft, early light of the sun,

Then hopped back to bed with a wiggle and wink, for his holiday work was all done.



 
 
 

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