One of the uses to which almost all of us frequently put the English language is the writing of letters-personal, business, or poison-pen. All sorts of books have, therefore, been published, advising us how to write letters courteously and effectively. Such books invariably include model our condolences. Each potential uses of these exemplars must, of course, modify them to suit his or her particular circumstances, needs and preferences
(print) 235 p. ; 24 cmAcknowledgments vii -- Introduction 3 -- Epistolary Mediation 13 -- Of Confide...
In the February \u2777 Word Ways (77-8), Dmitri Borgmann proposed as the keystone of logology that a...
Palindrome writing is a quirky, challenging discipline that has never attracted the sizable followin...
In the August 1972 issue of Word Ways, Darryl H. Francis shook the world of logology to its very fou...
Exploring what is at stake in the common lament that letter writing is dead, we cautiously celebrate...
At one time or another, everybody is asked to sign an autograph book, a school yearbook, a wedding b...
In honor of Dmitri Borgmann\u27s contributions to the field of logology, Word Ways published in Fe...
It was Dmitri Borgmann who put the word logology into circulation. Before Language on Vacation, hi...
The ordinary individual has long regarded his name and address as his most prized logological posses...
As I survey the logological scene from my ivory tower, I am dismayed by what I observe. It appears t...
The long voyage between my first tentative effort at constructing a short palindrome of some forty l...
The following letter was written by Richard Lederer after a fight with his wife-to-be, Carol, when h...
Towering above all other features of the logological landscape are palindromes. Enveloped in a majes...
Is letter-writing dead? Has the internet killed it? In “Yours Truly,” Eric D. Lehman finds that whil...
The year 1973 will be remembered as witnessing the publication of a book that goes to the very heart...
(print) 235 p. ; 24 cmAcknowledgments vii -- Introduction 3 -- Epistolary Mediation 13 -- Of Confide...
In the February \u2777 Word Ways (77-8), Dmitri Borgmann proposed as the keystone of logology that a...
Palindrome writing is a quirky, challenging discipline that has never attracted the sizable followin...
In the August 1972 issue of Word Ways, Darryl H. Francis shook the world of logology to its very fou...
Exploring what is at stake in the common lament that letter writing is dead, we cautiously celebrate...
At one time or another, everybody is asked to sign an autograph book, a school yearbook, a wedding b...
In honor of Dmitri Borgmann\u27s contributions to the field of logology, Word Ways published in Fe...
It was Dmitri Borgmann who put the word logology into circulation. Before Language on Vacation, hi...
The ordinary individual has long regarded his name and address as his most prized logological posses...
As I survey the logological scene from my ivory tower, I am dismayed by what I observe. It appears t...
The long voyage between my first tentative effort at constructing a short palindrome of some forty l...
The following letter was written by Richard Lederer after a fight with his wife-to-be, Carol, when h...
Towering above all other features of the logological landscape are palindromes. Enveloped in a majes...
Is letter-writing dead? Has the internet killed it? In “Yours Truly,” Eric D. Lehman finds that whil...
The year 1973 will be remembered as witnessing the publication of a book that goes to the very heart...
(print) 235 p. ; 24 cmAcknowledgments vii -- Introduction 3 -- Epistolary Mediation 13 -- Of Confide...
In the February \u2777 Word Ways (77-8), Dmitri Borgmann proposed as the keystone of logology that a...
Palindrome writing is a quirky, challenging discipline that has never attracted the sizable followin...