In the May 2005 issue of WORD WAYS, Bob McKenty, Alexian Gregory, and I published a version of this article. Ever since, I have continued to dive almost daily for the treasure of additional eye rhymes. You know how it is: We logologists get swept away by a letter-perfect, endlessly undulating concept, and we drown ecstatically in its depths and its shallows
1972 saw the publication of the first volume of the revised Supplement to the Oxford English Diction...
In the February \u2777 Word Ways (77-8), Dmitri Borgmann proposed as the keystone of logology that a...
This brief article has its origins in the late 1960s, but has been inspired by more recent work in t...
The answer is that each line ends with a word that looks like it rhymes with another word or other w...
Logology has intrigued many writers. George Bernard Shaw, for example, gave us the word GHOTI. Pro...
In the February 1976 Word Ways, Maxey Brooke defines rhyme as the identity in sounds, of the accent...
Sight rhymes are rhymes that look like rhymes. They have the same ending letters that you would fin...
Over the years Word Ways has displayed a varied logological corpus. In this column I revisit forgott...
One day during his last illness, my father suddenly remembered a car trick from his boyhood. The tr...
In this column, run whenever a sufficient number of poetic effusions have been collected by the edit...
In the August 1972 issue of Word Ways, Darryl H. Francis shook the world of logology to its very fou...
A. A. Milne of Winnie-the-Pooh fame contended that light verse is the hardest and most severely tech...
This is an abridged version of an article printed in the March 15, 1907 issue of the Ardmore Puzzler...
Popular word puzzle lore has it that there are only two relatively common words having the five vowe...
I wouldn\u27t be a rich letterer if I didn\u27t tell you that the acronimble Peter Pangram who put t...
1972 saw the publication of the first volume of the revised Supplement to the Oxford English Diction...
In the February \u2777 Word Ways (77-8), Dmitri Borgmann proposed as the keystone of logology that a...
This brief article has its origins in the late 1960s, but has been inspired by more recent work in t...
The answer is that each line ends with a word that looks like it rhymes with another word or other w...
Logology has intrigued many writers. George Bernard Shaw, for example, gave us the word GHOTI. Pro...
In the February 1976 Word Ways, Maxey Brooke defines rhyme as the identity in sounds, of the accent...
Sight rhymes are rhymes that look like rhymes. They have the same ending letters that you would fin...
Over the years Word Ways has displayed a varied logological corpus. In this column I revisit forgott...
One day during his last illness, my father suddenly remembered a car trick from his boyhood. The tr...
In this column, run whenever a sufficient number of poetic effusions have been collected by the edit...
In the August 1972 issue of Word Ways, Darryl H. Francis shook the world of logology to its very fou...
A. A. Milne of Winnie-the-Pooh fame contended that light verse is the hardest and most severely tech...
This is an abridged version of an article printed in the March 15, 1907 issue of the Ardmore Puzzler...
Popular word puzzle lore has it that there are only two relatively common words having the five vowe...
I wouldn\u27t be a rich letterer if I didn\u27t tell you that the acronimble Peter Pangram who put t...
1972 saw the publication of the first volume of the revised Supplement to the Oxford English Diction...
In the February \u2777 Word Ways (77-8), Dmitri Borgmann proposed as the keystone of logology that a...
This brief article has its origins in the late 1960s, but has been inspired by more recent work in t...