acrostic

     

An acrostic (from the late Greek akróstichon, from ákros, "top", an stíchos, "verse") is a poem or other writing in an alphabetic script, in which the first letter, syllable or word of each line, paragraph or other recurring feature in the text spells out another message. A form of constrained writing, an acrostic can be used as a mnemonic device to aide memory retrieval.

Trivia about acrostic

  • Acorrectresponseon seeing theseinitialcharacters
  • It's a poem or verse in which certain letters, usually the first in each line, spell out a word
  • (Jimmy of the Clue Crew shows a poem on the monitor.) The first letter of each line spells out a word or name; here, it's the name "Alice" that Lewis Carroll puts into this type of poem, from the Greek for "tip of the line"
  • In Hebrew Psalm 34 is one of these: its verses begin with the letters Alef, Bet, Gimel...