One day during his last illness, my father suddenly remembered a car trick from his boyhood. The trick involved the Latin mnemonic MUTUS NOMEN DEDIT COCIS. Everyone was astonished that a nonesense phrase had lain dormant in his mind\u27s deepest recesses for more than sixty years, then sprung serendipitously to his weakened senses
THere are two ways to try this little teaser: either match the definitions in the left-hand (numbere...
In the May 2005 issue of WORD WAYS, Bob McKenty, Alexian Gregory, and I published a version of this ...
Listed below are 34 kinds of word puzzles, games and curiosities, each one in scrambled form. Your ...
In the November 1968 and the May 1977 Word Ways, I described the use of the word BIBLE ATLAS GOOSE T...
Surprise is a key ingredient of wordplay\u27s charm. Many forms of wordplay amuse us by rearranging...
In Mathematical Mind-Benders, Peter Winkler. Wellesley, MA: A.K. Peters, 2007. Reprinted by permissi...
One of the most mysterious of all spelling tricks with cards, not well known today even to magicians...
Over the years Word Ways has displayed a varied logological corpus. In this column I revisit forgott...
The following puzzles are excerpted from a book entitled Word Puzzles to be published by Dembner Ent...
Some words are interesting because they have a unique, outstanding property. Howard Bergerson has n...
At one time or another, everybody is asked to sign an autograph book, a school yearbook, a wedding b...
Many Word Ways articles have dealt with words differing from each other in only a single letter (suc...
A curious linguistic phenomenon that has received little attention in recent years is the fact that ...
One Sunday in 1953, Cornell students Doub McIlroy and Bob Vanderhoek, weary of solving crossword puz...
In The Case of the Acro-Double , a short mystery story in the November 1972 Word Ways, the hero, Fa...
THere are two ways to try this little teaser: either match the definitions in the left-hand (numbere...
In the May 2005 issue of WORD WAYS, Bob McKenty, Alexian Gregory, and I published a version of this ...
Listed below are 34 kinds of word puzzles, games and curiosities, each one in scrambled form. Your ...
In the November 1968 and the May 1977 Word Ways, I described the use of the word BIBLE ATLAS GOOSE T...
Surprise is a key ingredient of wordplay\u27s charm. Many forms of wordplay amuse us by rearranging...
In Mathematical Mind-Benders, Peter Winkler. Wellesley, MA: A.K. Peters, 2007. Reprinted by permissi...
One of the most mysterious of all spelling tricks with cards, not well known today even to magicians...
Over the years Word Ways has displayed a varied logological corpus. In this column I revisit forgott...
The following puzzles are excerpted from a book entitled Word Puzzles to be published by Dembner Ent...
Some words are interesting because they have a unique, outstanding property. Howard Bergerson has n...
At one time or another, everybody is asked to sign an autograph book, a school yearbook, a wedding b...
Many Word Ways articles have dealt with words differing from each other in only a single letter (suc...
A curious linguistic phenomenon that has received little attention in recent years is the fact that ...
One Sunday in 1953, Cornell students Doub McIlroy and Bob Vanderhoek, weary of solving crossword puz...
In The Case of the Acro-Double , a short mystery story in the November 1972 Word Ways, the hero, Fa...
THere are two ways to try this little teaser: either match the definitions in the left-hand (numbere...
In the May 2005 issue of WORD WAYS, Bob McKenty, Alexian Gregory, and I published a version of this ...
Listed below are 34 kinds of word puzzles, games and curiosities, each one in scrambled form. Your ...