In her November 1973 Word Ways review of Howard Bergerson\u27s new book, Palindromes and Anagrams (Dover, 1973), Jezebel Q. Xixx declared that nowhere near 1,169 really good, modern anagrams have been devised . In a letter, she further asserted that she could create a dozen superb anagrams a day indefinitely, all having the quality so conspicuously absent in previously-published examples
In a recent Word Ways article, Celebrity One-Word Anagrams , the problem of finding famous (or even...
I first present a list of just over a hundred sumgrams (words with equal numerical value) of the lon...
Webster\u27s Dictionary defines colloquy as mutual discourse. Readers are encouraged to submit addit...
In her article Anagrams: Ars Magna? in the May 1974 Word Ways, Judith Tarr Isquit described the re...
There are several criteria available for judging the quality of an anagram. To begin with, an anagr...
The year 1973 will be remembered as witnessing the publication of a book that goes to the very heart...
What\u27s so interesting about anagrams? They\u27re just rearrangements of letters. Couldn\u27t\u2...
With the exception of palindromes, anagrams are the most difficult kind of word puzzle to compose. T...
Traditionally a favorite linguistic recreation, anagramming becomes especially diverting when applie...
In a recent issue of Word Ways, Harry Stern closed an otherwise wonderful article by impugning the v...
The appeal in constructing anagrams lies in the balance between the extreme confinement of working w...
The two short essays below are transposals of each other (that is, each can be formed by rearranging...
Some lovers of language are merely smitten, others are outright crazy. I\u27m in the former categor...
Take the initial letter of each word in a common phrase, saying or longer quote, rearrange them and ...
The title is an amalgam, an anagram of the names of the joint authors who propose the term as a reas...
In a recent Word Ways article, Celebrity One-Word Anagrams , the problem of finding famous (or even...
I first present a list of just over a hundred sumgrams (words with equal numerical value) of the lon...
Webster\u27s Dictionary defines colloquy as mutual discourse. Readers are encouraged to submit addit...
In her article Anagrams: Ars Magna? in the May 1974 Word Ways, Judith Tarr Isquit described the re...
There are several criteria available for judging the quality of an anagram. To begin with, an anagr...
The year 1973 will be remembered as witnessing the publication of a book that goes to the very heart...
What\u27s so interesting about anagrams? They\u27re just rearrangements of letters. Couldn\u27t\u2...
With the exception of palindromes, anagrams are the most difficult kind of word puzzle to compose. T...
Traditionally a favorite linguistic recreation, anagramming becomes especially diverting when applie...
In a recent issue of Word Ways, Harry Stern closed an otherwise wonderful article by impugning the v...
The appeal in constructing anagrams lies in the balance between the extreme confinement of working w...
The two short essays below are transposals of each other (that is, each can be formed by rearranging...
Some lovers of language are merely smitten, others are outright crazy. I\u27m in the former categor...
Take the initial letter of each word in a common phrase, saying or longer quote, rearrange them and ...
The title is an amalgam, an anagram of the names of the joint authors who propose the term as a reas...
In a recent Word Ways article, Celebrity One-Word Anagrams , the problem of finding famous (or even...
I first present a list of just over a hundred sumgrams (words with equal numerical value) of the lon...
Webster\u27s Dictionary defines colloquy as mutual discourse. Readers are encouraged to submit addit...