Just for clarification, the possibilities I was referring to were permutations on the set of letters {
q,
a,
i,
r}: 4 first choices X 3 second choices X 2 third choices X 1 fourth choice = 24 permutations (Jamie Ann had the right idea). I didn't think very many would be English words, considering how few have a
q but no
u. I've just scanned a couple of internet listings of
q words without a
u (related to scrabble and other word games), but not one word listed in these uses the exact letters (
Iraq doesn't count in scrabble). There might be something in a non-English language, though.
-Celia
Only the young die young.