Over the years, Word Ways has displayed a varied logological corpus. In this column I revisit forgotten ideas, connect seemingly-disparate concepts, and suggest further investigations
Place the different letters of a word on a sheet of paper, and, without lifting pencil from paper, t...
Over the years Word Ways has displayed a varied logological corpus. In this column I revisit forgott...
Most readers of Word Ways are aware that Henry Ernest Dudeney, England\u27s most distinguished puzzl...
Over the years Word Ways has displayed a varied logological corpus. In this column I revisit forgott...
In Word Ways 2005-103ff., Eric Iverson presented some 4-letter trees, and some trees with 5-letter w...
For an introduction to this series of articles classifying and summarizing unsolved logological prob...
The orchard problem, also known as the three-planting problem in the literature, is to plant n trees...
On March 13 2005, Will Shortz presented an interesting word puzzle on National Public Radio: rearran...
The most important purpose of Word Ways is to present new logological ideas, showing how far one can...
Logophiles have extensively studied interesting properties of isolated words: palindromes, anagrams ...
Some words, like DEIFIED, have patterns that immediately attract the eye; others, like SCINTILLESCEN...
Pick a group of n different letters, and in turn add A, B, ..., Z to these. How many of these enlarg...
For several years I have attempted to bring some order to the logological jungle. One result has bee...
For an introduction to this series of articles classifying and summarizing unsolved logological prob...
In a desperate attempt to make ever-larger word squares, logologists have succeeded only in producin...
Place the different letters of a word on a sheet of paper, and, without lifting pencil from paper, t...
Over the years Word Ways has displayed a varied logological corpus. In this column I revisit forgott...
Most readers of Word Ways are aware that Henry Ernest Dudeney, England\u27s most distinguished puzzl...
Over the years Word Ways has displayed a varied logological corpus. In this column I revisit forgott...
In Word Ways 2005-103ff., Eric Iverson presented some 4-letter trees, and some trees with 5-letter w...
For an introduction to this series of articles classifying and summarizing unsolved logological prob...
The orchard problem, also known as the three-planting problem in the literature, is to plant n trees...
On March 13 2005, Will Shortz presented an interesting word puzzle on National Public Radio: rearran...
The most important purpose of Word Ways is to present new logological ideas, showing how far one can...
Logophiles have extensively studied interesting properties of isolated words: palindromes, anagrams ...
Some words, like DEIFIED, have patterns that immediately attract the eye; others, like SCINTILLESCEN...
Pick a group of n different letters, and in turn add A, B, ..., Z to these. How many of these enlarg...
For several years I have attempted to bring some order to the logological jungle. One result has bee...
For an introduction to this series of articles classifying and summarizing unsolved logological prob...
In a desperate attempt to make ever-larger word squares, logologists have succeeded only in producin...
Place the different letters of a word on a sheet of paper, and, without lifting pencil from paper, t...
Over the years Word Ways has displayed a varied logological corpus. In this column I revisit forgott...
Most readers of Word Ways are aware that Henry Ernest Dudeney, England\u27s most distinguished puzzl...