Spell out a word by connecting its different letters by lines, as illustrated in the left for WHICH and THAT. Allowing repeated traverses of the connector lines. NOTION traces out the WHICH graph; SENSE traces out the THAT graph. Allowing dwell on each doubled letter, BEETLE traces out the WHICH graph: SEEKS just as they can by their letter patterns. AREA has the same pattern as THAT. ORDER and VERSE have the same pattern as WHICH
Logologists have been aware of word strings -- overlapping lists of words such as sat, ate, tea, ear...
On March 13 2005, Will Shortz presented an interesting word puzzle on National Public Radio: rearran...
AbstractLinguists often represent the relationships between words in a collection of text as an undi...
In February 1995, A Word Graph Bestiary presented all possible graph shapes for words having five ...
Fig la is a S-graph (S for simple). It contains the number names FOUR, FIVE, SIX, SEVEN, EIGHT, NIN...
The February 1996 Word Ways introduced the concept of a queen\u27s-move-graphable word: place the di...
Place the different letters of a word on a sheet of paper, and, without lifting pencil from paper, t...
As my recent contributions to Word Ways show, I enjoy graphing. But, one day I got bored with long ...
In each of the eight puzzles presented below, each line contains three definitions. Find a word sati...
The words HUTS, RUTS, ARMY, and DENE (British: valley ) have in common a property not too hard to d...
In the May 1973 issue of Word Ways, we presented the first part of a two-part article exploring the ...
The May 1973 issue of Word Ways introduced the concept of a word network, a connected diagram of wor...
Over the years, Word Ways has displayed a varied logological corpus. In this column I revisit forgot...
In the May 1996 Word Way I exhibited a bestiary of symmetric graphs showing how the different letter...
In chess, the queen is the most versatile piece, moving in any of eight directions; unlike the king,...
Logologists have been aware of word strings -- overlapping lists of words such as sat, ate, tea, ear...
On March 13 2005, Will Shortz presented an interesting word puzzle on National Public Radio: rearran...
AbstractLinguists often represent the relationships between words in a collection of text as an undi...
In February 1995, A Word Graph Bestiary presented all possible graph shapes for words having five ...
Fig la is a S-graph (S for simple). It contains the number names FOUR, FIVE, SIX, SEVEN, EIGHT, NIN...
The February 1996 Word Ways introduced the concept of a queen\u27s-move-graphable word: place the di...
Place the different letters of a word on a sheet of paper, and, without lifting pencil from paper, t...
As my recent contributions to Word Ways show, I enjoy graphing. But, one day I got bored with long ...
In each of the eight puzzles presented below, each line contains three definitions. Find a word sati...
The words HUTS, RUTS, ARMY, and DENE (British: valley ) have in common a property not too hard to d...
In the May 1973 issue of Word Ways, we presented the first part of a two-part article exploring the ...
The May 1973 issue of Word Ways introduced the concept of a word network, a connected diagram of wor...
Over the years, Word Ways has displayed a varied logological corpus. In this column I revisit forgot...
In the May 1996 Word Way I exhibited a bestiary of symmetric graphs showing how the different letter...
In chess, the queen is the most versatile piece, moving in any of eight directions; unlike the king,...
Logologists have been aware of word strings -- overlapping lists of words such as sat, ate, tea, ear...
On March 13 2005, Will Shortz presented an interesting word puzzle on National Public Radio: rearran...
AbstractLinguists often represent the relationships between words in a collection of text as an undi...