How many different words can be formed with all the letters of the word INTERNET if

An acronym (pronounced AK-ruh-nihm, from Greek acro- in the sense of extreme or tip and onyma or name) is an abbreviation of several words in such a way that the abbreviation itself forms a pronounceable word. The word may already exist or it can be a new word. Webster's cites SNAFU and RADAR, two terms of World War Two vintage, as examples of acronyms that were created.

Many organizations and corporate entities use acronyms as names. Furthermore, acronyms, along with related initialisms an abbreviations, are frequently used as industry terms, such as with manufacturing.

How is an acronym defined?

According to the strictest definition of an acronym, only abbreviations that are pronounced as words qualify. So by these standards, for example, COBOL is an acronym because it's pronounced as a word but WHO (World Health Organization) is not an acronym because the letters in the abbreviation are pronounced individually. However, opinions differ on what constitutes an acronym: Merriam-Webster, for example, says that an acronym is just "a word formed from the initial letters of a multi-word name."

Frequently, acronyms are formed that use existing words (and sometimes the acronym is invented first and the phrase name represented is designed to fit the acronym). Here are some examples of acronyms that use existing words:

BASIC (Beginner's All-Purpose Symbolic Instruction Code)
NOW (National Organization for Women)
OASIS (Organization for the Advancement of Structured Information Standards)

Acronyms vs. abbreviations vs. initialisms

Abbreviations that use the first letter of each word in a phrase are sometimes referred to as initialisms. Initialisms can be but are not always acronyms. AT&T, BT, CBS, CNN, IBM, and NBC are initialisms that are not acronyms. Many acronym lists you'll see are really lists of acronyms and initialisms or just lists of abbreviations. (Note that abbreviations include shortened words like "esp." for "especially" as well as shortened phrases.)

Summing up:

  • An abbreviation is a shortening of a word or a phrase.
  • An acronym is an abbreviation that forms a word.
  • An initialism is an abbreviation that uses the first letter of each word in the phrase (thus, some but not all initialisms are acronyms).

Related terns to acronyms include the anacronym, recursive acronym, backronym, and apronym.  

  • An acronym so familiar that no one remembers what it stands for is called an anacronym (For example, few people know that COBOL stands for Common Business Oriented Language.)
  • An acronym in which one of the letters stands for the actual word abbreviated therein is called a recursive acronym. (For example, VISA is said to stand for VISA International Service Association.)
  • An acronym in which the short form was original and words made up to stand for it afterwards is called a backronym. (For example, SOS was originally chosen as a distress signal because it lent itself well to Morse code. Long versions, including Save Our Ship and Save our Souls, came later.)
  • An acronym whose letters spell a word meaningful in the context of the term it stands for is called an apronym. (For example, BASIC, which stands for Beginner's All-purpose Symbolic Instruction Code, is a very simple programming language.)

This was last updated in December 2020

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Video transcript

- [Voiceover] So let's ask ourselves some interesting questions about alphabets in the English language. And in case you don't remember and are in the mood to count, there are 26 alphabets. So if you go, "A, B, C, D, E, F, G, H, I, J, K, L, M, N, O, P, Q, R, S, T, U, V, W, X, Y, and Z," you'll get, you'll get 26, 26 alphabets. Now let's ask some interesting questions. So given that there are 26 alphabets in the English language, how many possible three letter words are there? And we're not going to be thinking about phonetics or how hard it is to pronounce it. So, for example, the word, the word ZGT would be a legitimate word in this example. Or the word, the word, the word SKJ would be a legitimate word in this example. So how many possible three letter words are there in the English language? I encourage you to pause the video and try to think about it. Alright, I assume you've had a go at it. So let's just think about it, for three letter words there's three spaces, so how many possibilities are there for the first one? Well, there's 26 possible letters for the first one. Anything from a to z would be completely fine. Now how many possibilities for the second one? And I intentionally ask this to you to be a distractor because we've seen a lot of examples. We're saying, "Oh, there's 26 possibilities "for the first one and maybe there's 25 for the second one, "and then 24 for the third," but that's not the case right over here because we can repeat letters. I didn't say that all of the letters had to be different. So, for example, the word, the word HHH would also be a legitimate word in our example right over here. So we have 26 possibilities for the second letter and we have 26 possibilities for the third letter. So we're going to have, and I don't know what this is, 26 to the third power possibilities, or 26 times 26 time 26 and you can figure out what that is. That is how many possible three letter words we can have for the English language if we didn't care about how to pronounceable they are, if they meant anything and if we repeated letters. Now let's ask a different question. What if we said, "How many possible three letter words "are there if we want all different letters?" So we want all different letters. So these all have to be different letters. Different, different letters and once again, pause the video and see if you can think it through. Alright, so this is where permutations start to be useful. Although, I think a lot of things like this, it's always best to reason through than try to figure out if some formula applies to it. So in this situation, well, if we went in order, we could have 26 different letters for the first one, 26 different possibilities for the first one. You know, I'm always starting with that one, but there's nothing special about the one on the left. We could say that the one on the right, there's 26 possibilities, well for each of those possibilities, for each of those 26 possibilities, there might be 25 possibilities for what we put in the middle one if we say we're going to figure out the middle one next. And then for each of these 25 times 26 possibilities for where we figured out two of the letters, there's 24 possibilities because we've already used two letters for the last bucket that we haven't filled. And the only reason I went 26, 25, 24 is to show you there's nothing special about always filling in the left most letter or the left most chair first. It's just about, well, let's just think in terms of let's just fill out one of the buckets first. Hey, we have the most possibilities for that. Once we use something up, then for each of those possibilities we'll have one left, one less for the next, the next bucket. And so I could do 24 times 25 times 26, but just so I don't fully confuse you, I'll go back to what I have been doing. 26 possibilities for the left most one. For each of those, you would have 25 possibilities for the next one that you're going to try to figure out because you already used one letter and they have to be different. And then for the last bucket, you're going to have 24 possibilities, so this is going to be 26 times 25 times 24, whatever that happens to be. And if we wanted to write it in the notation of permutations, we would say that this is equal to, we're taking 26 things, sorry, not two p. 20, my brain is malfunctioning. 26, we're figuring out how many permutations are there for putting 26 different things into three different spaces and this is 26, if we just blindly apply the formula, which I never suggest doing. It would be 26 factorial over 26 minus three factorial, which would be 26 factorial over 23 factorial, which is going to be exactly this right over here because the 23 times 22 times 21 all the way down to one is going to cancel with the 23 factorial. And so the whole point of this video, there's two points, is one, as soon as someone says, "How many different letters could you form" or something like that, you don't just blindly do permutations or combinations. You think about well, what is being asked in the question. Here, I really just have to take 26 times 26 times 26. The other thing I want to point out, and I know I keep pointing it out, and it's probably getting tiring to you, is even when permutations are applicable, in my brain, at least, it's always more valuable to just try to reason through the problem as opposed to just saying, "Oh there's this formula "that I remember from weeks or years ago "in my life that had an N factorial and K factorial "and I had to memorize it, I have to look it up." Always much more useful to just reason it through.

How many words can you make with the word internet?

77 words can be made from the letters in the word internet.

How many distinct ways can the letters in the word internet be arranged?

5040 ways. Which four letters have the most word combinations possible?

How many different words can form hariyana?

Solution : (i) The given word, 'HARYANA' consists of 7 letters, out of which there are 1 H, 3 A's, 1 R, 1 Y and 1 N. <br> Total number of words formed by all the letters of the given word `=(7!)/(3!)= 840.

How many different words can be formed with the letters of the word practice such that each of the word begin with E and ends with R?

Hence, the required answer is 120.