A ten-square consists of ten different 10-letter words written one under another, so that the first column reads the same as the first word, the second column the same as the second word, and so on
Avid readers of Word Ways may remember that I attempted a computer search for 10-by-10 word squares ...
It\u27s know that for one hundred years Puzzlists strove for what appears Could not be done within t...
It has now been one year since I began my computer search for 10x10 double word square. My efforts ...
At the end of my article Hunting the Ten-Square (May 2004 Word Ways) I said that about one million...
It is nearly 85 years since the first ten-square was published. American National Puzzlers\u27 Leag...
It is exactly five years ago since Ars Magna: The Ten-Square appeared in Word Ways. This article ...
Hats off to Jeff Grant! In 9x9 Word Squares in the November, 1980 issue of Word Ways, he has rescu...
A ten-square should consist of ten different 10-letter words, all to be found in reputable dictionar...
In Hunting the Ten Square in the May 2004 Word Ways, Rex Gooch mentions that Graham Toal recently ...
Word squares have always fascinated me. From an early age I took delight in devising regular 3-by-3 ...
In Search of the Ten-Square in the November 1990 Word Ways featured in a manually-constructed squar...
There have been many discussions over the years on how to make ten-squares, including what kind of w...
In the August 1988 Word Ways, I wrote about my plans to launch a computer attack on the 10-by-10 dou...
In the May 1988 Word Ways I described my struggle to construct a non-tautonymic ten-square -- with l...
Recent articles by Doug McIlroy in Word Ways have demonstrated the value of the computer in discover...
Avid readers of Word Ways may remember that I attempted a computer search for 10-by-10 word squares ...
It\u27s know that for one hundred years Puzzlists strove for what appears Could not be done within t...
It has now been one year since I began my computer search for 10x10 double word square. My efforts ...
At the end of my article Hunting the Ten-Square (May 2004 Word Ways) I said that about one million...
It is nearly 85 years since the first ten-square was published. American National Puzzlers\u27 Leag...
It is exactly five years ago since Ars Magna: The Ten-Square appeared in Word Ways. This article ...
Hats off to Jeff Grant! In 9x9 Word Squares in the November, 1980 issue of Word Ways, he has rescu...
A ten-square should consist of ten different 10-letter words, all to be found in reputable dictionar...
In Hunting the Ten Square in the May 2004 Word Ways, Rex Gooch mentions that Graham Toal recently ...
Word squares have always fascinated me. From an early age I took delight in devising regular 3-by-3 ...
In Search of the Ten-Square in the November 1990 Word Ways featured in a manually-constructed squar...
There have been many discussions over the years on how to make ten-squares, including what kind of w...
In the August 1988 Word Ways, I wrote about my plans to launch a computer attack on the 10-by-10 dou...
In the May 1988 Word Ways I described my struggle to construct a non-tautonymic ten-square -- with l...
Recent articles by Doug McIlroy in Word Ways have demonstrated the value of the computer in discover...
Avid readers of Word Ways may remember that I attempted a computer search for 10-by-10 word squares ...
It\u27s know that for one hundred years Puzzlists strove for what appears Could not be done within t...
It has now been one year since I began my computer search for 10x10 double word square. My efforts ...