Modern research indicates that a 12-square would be essentially impossible to construct from indexed words and phrases, even using a large number of languages. No source or explanation is given for any of the "words", so this square does not meet the standards for legitimate word squares.
#G I R L S S S FULL#
This is square 7 of Chapter IX of the Third Book, which is full of incomplete and complete "squares". The following 12×12 array of letters appears in a Hebrew manuscript of The Book of the Sacred Magic of Abramelin the Mage of 1458, said to have been "given by God, and bequeathed by Abraham". If the "words" in a word square need not be true words, arbitrarily large squares of pronounceable combinations can be constructed. Thus the square consists of a palindrome ("tenet"), a reversal ("sator" and "rotas"), and a word ("opera") which can be reversed into a passably coined name ("Arepo"). However, the word "Arepo" appears nowhere else in Latin literature most of those who have studied the Sator Square agree that it is to be taken as a proper name, either an adaptation of a non-Latin word or, more likely, a name invented specifically for this sentence. In addition to satisfying the basic properties of word squares, the Sator Square spread widely due to several other attributes: it is palindromic it can be read as a sentence of obscure meaning and additional meaning such as reference to the Christian Paternoster prayer can be derived from its letters.
![g i r l s s s g i r l s s s](https://www.uploadandwin.com/Images/bar/barri310/girlsss-pic824.jpg)
The Sator Square is a famous word square in Latin.
![g i r l s s s g i r l s s s](https://p.favim.com/orig/2018/09/16/natural-makeup-girlsss-model-Favim.com-6279516.png)
Sator Square in Corinium ( Cirencester), England Sator Square