Well, can you? Freely translated, this enigmatic title invites you, the reader, to discover what is logologically unusual about it. Obviously, it is composed of three-letter isograms (words with no repeated letters), but the property is more subtle than this. Read on only if you have given up
In any logological research one is required, consciously or subconsciously, to devise and follow a s...
Dmitri Borgmann\u27s Language on Vacation includes the following tibit concerning wordplay and the t...
It has been known for at least fifteen years that certain words can be translated into other words b...
In exploring the recreational byways of the English language, the most important tool of the logolog...
In past Word Ways articles, various authors have explored words which contain consecutive letters of...
This note is inspired by Numbo-Carrean, which was introduced in Ross Eckler\u27s Word Recreations [1...
What words in the Third Edition of the Merriam-Webster Unabridged Dictionary have the most A\u27s th...
One of the many projects that has engaged the attention of serious-minded logologists has been the q...
One Sunday in 1953, Cornell students Doub McIlroy and Bob Vanderhoek, weary of solving crossword puz...
In the May 1978 Kickshaws, I pointed out that five-letter words still have unexplored logological as...
This article continues my investigations of the logological properties of number-names begun in the ...
This article responds to the challenge posed by Susan Thorpe on page 212 of the August 2001 issue of...
This article contains a list of words with interesting logological properties from Merriam-Webster\u...
In A New Logology Cash Contest in the May 1974 issue of Word Ways, Ralph Beaman invited readers to...
For an introduction to this series of articles classifying and summarizing unsolved logological prob...
In any logological research one is required, consciously or subconsciously, to devise and follow a s...
Dmitri Borgmann\u27s Language on Vacation includes the following tibit concerning wordplay and the t...
It has been known for at least fifteen years that certain words can be translated into other words b...
In exploring the recreational byways of the English language, the most important tool of the logolog...
In past Word Ways articles, various authors have explored words which contain consecutive letters of...
This note is inspired by Numbo-Carrean, which was introduced in Ross Eckler\u27s Word Recreations [1...
What words in the Third Edition of the Merriam-Webster Unabridged Dictionary have the most A\u27s th...
One of the many projects that has engaged the attention of serious-minded logologists has been the q...
One Sunday in 1953, Cornell students Doub McIlroy and Bob Vanderhoek, weary of solving crossword puz...
In the May 1978 Kickshaws, I pointed out that five-letter words still have unexplored logological as...
This article continues my investigations of the logological properties of number-names begun in the ...
This article responds to the challenge posed by Susan Thorpe on page 212 of the August 2001 issue of...
This article contains a list of words with interesting logological properties from Merriam-Webster\u...
In A New Logology Cash Contest in the May 1974 issue of Word Ways, Ralph Beaman invited readers to...
For an introduction to this series of articles classifying and summarizing unsolved logological prob...
In any logological research one is required, consciously or subconsciously, to devise and follow a s...
Dmitri Borgmann\u27s Language on Vacation includes the following tibit concerning wordplay and the t...
It has been known for at least fifteen years that certain words can be translated into other words b...