The following 11-by-11 word square appears in Language on Vacation (Scribner\u27s, 1965), and is described by the author, Dmitri Borgmann, as \u27quasi square\u27. The seven central words are of impeccable quality, but the two sets of letter combinations at each end are complete gibberish
I have previously attempted to find word squares with words as diagonals for squares of order 9, 8, ...
In Search of the Ten-Square in the November 1990 Word Ways featured in a manually-constructed squar...
In the February 1973 issue of Word Ways, I posed the problem of constructing a tautonymic 10 x 10 wo...
Since my first report on the attempt to construct a modern tautonymic 10 x 10 word square, Darryl H....
When I read Dmitri Borgmann\u27s article on 100-letter tautonymic word squares in the November 1973 ...
Anyone who has tried to construct a regular word square of the ninth order will understand why there...
In a desperate attempt to make ever-larger word squares, logologists have succeeded only in producin...
What is the largest number of different letters that can be used in a word square? For word squares ...
In a companion article, I presented the hundred 6x6 quality word squares. In this article, I extend...
At the end of my article Hunting the Ten-Square (May 2004 Word Ways) I said that about one million...
In the May 1988 Word Ways I described my struggle to construct a non-tautonymic ten-square -- with l...
In his article Most Quality Word Squares in the February 1988 issue of Word Ways, Dmitri Borgmann ...
The history of word square construction in the United States has largely been one of the strenuous a...
This is the first 11-square I have found by entirely automatic means. It took as long as finding a ...
This is the first 11-square I have found by entirely automatic means. It took as long as finding a ...
I have previously attempted to find word squares with words as diagonals for squares of order 9, 8, ...
In Search of the Ten-Square in the November 1990 Word Ways featured in a manually-constructed squar...
In the February 1973 issue of Word Ways, I posed the problem of constructing a tautonymic 10 x 10 wo...
Since my first report on the attempt to construct a modern tautonymic 10 x 10 word square, Darryl H....
When I read Dmitri Borgmann\u27s article on 100-letter tautonymic word squares in the November 1973 ...
Anyone who has tried to construct a regular word square of the ninth order will understand why there...
In a desperate attempt to make ever-larger word squares, logologists have succeeded only in producin...
What is the largest number of different letters that can be used in a word square? For word squares ...
In a companion article, I presented the hundred 6x6 quality word squares. In this article, I extend...
At the end of my article Hunting the Ten-Square (May 2004 Word Ways) I said that about one million...
In the May 1988 Word Ways I described my struggle to construct a non-tautonymic ten-square -- with l...
In his article Most Quality Word Squares in the February 1988 issue of Word Ways, Dmitri Borgmann ...
The history of word square construction in the United States has largely been one of the strenuous a...
This is the first 11-square I have found by entirely automatic means. It took as long as finding a ...
This is the first 11-square I have found by entirely automatic means. It took as long as finding a ...
I have previously attempted to find word squares with words as diagonals for squares of order 9, 8, ...
In Search of the Ten-Square in the November 1990 Word Ways featured in a manually-constructed squar...
In the February 1973 issue of Word Ways, I posed the problem of constructing a tautonymic 10 x 10 wo...