I wouldn\u27t be a rich letterer if I didn\u27t tell you that the acronimble Peter Pangram who put together this dictionary is an alphabet male, paronamazing pun gent, alliterary anagrammarian, morpheme addict, onomatopetic onomasticator, his Lexcellency who lives in a Camel lot of palindromedaries, Uncle Rebus, and Charader of the Lost Art
Webster\u27s Dictionary defines colloquy as mutual discourse. Readers are encouraged to submit addit...
In Mathematical Mind-Benders, Peter Winkler. Wellesley, MA: A.K. Peters, 2007. Reprinted by permissi...
A palindrome that contains every letter of the alphabet is called a palindromic pangram. In Dmitri B...
The Oxford University Press, publisher of the prestigious Oxford English Dictionary and its current ...
Wordplay, or punning, refers to textual items that deliberately use (in production or reception, or ...
A new genre offering opportunities for amusement involves what I call palingroans. The first one ap...
Samuel Johnson, compiler of the first dictionary of the English language, included in its his defini...
The November 1973 issue of Word Ways comments on the relative paucity of new word palindromes in the...
The computer plays an increasingly important role in recreational linguistics. it has already been u...
A bunch of definitive reverse acrostics presented in February (\u2710-8) included seven wordplay ter...
Webster\u27s Dictionary defines colloquy as mutual discourse. Readers are encouraged to submit ...
The accident and popular Art of the Palindrome blazes out from the epicenter of the universe of lett...
Imaginative palindromes have been featured in two recent Word Ways articles: Soap Dealers and Bee...
I find the art of palindrome creation both fascinating and ridiculous. The difficulty, especially w...
Webster\u27s Dictionary defines colloquy as mutual discourse. Readers are encouraged to submit addit...
Webster\u27s Dictionary defines colloquy as mutual discourse. Readers are encouraged to submit addit...
In Mathematical Mind-Benders, Peter Winkler. Wellesley, MA: A.K. Peters, 2007. Reprinted by permissi...
A palindrome that contains every letter of the alphabet is called a palindromic pangram. In Dmitri B...
The Oxford University Press, publisher of the prestigious Oxford English Dictionary and its current ...
Wordplay, or punning, refers to textual items that deliberately use (in production or reception, or ...
A new genre offering opportunities for amusement involves what I call palingroans. The first one ap...
Samuel Johnson, compiler of the first dictionary of the English language, included in its his defini...
The November 1973 issue of Word Ways comments on the relative paucity of new word palindromes in the...
The computer plays an increasingly important role in recreational linguistics. it has already been u...
A bunch of definitive reverse acrostics presented in February (\u2710-8) included seven wordplay ter...
Webster\u27s Dictionary defines colloquy as mutual discourse. Readers are encouraged to submit ...
The accident and popular Art of the Palindrome blazes out from the epicenter of the universe of lett...
Imaginative palindromes have been featured in two recent Word Ways articles: Soap Dealers and Bee...
I find the art of palindrome creation both fascinating and ridiculous. The difficulty, especially w...
Webster\u27s Dictionary defines colloquy as mutual discourse. Readers are encouraged to submit addit...
Webster\u27s Dictionary defines colloquy as mutual discourse. Readers are encouraged to submit addit...
In Mathematical Mind-Benders, Peter Winkler. Wellesley, MA: A.K. Peters, 2007. Reprinted by permissi...
A palindrome that contains every letter of the alphabet is called a palindromic pangram. In Dmitri B...