Before plunging into new territory, we pause to take note of a congeries of addenda to subjects probed in previous articles of this series
© 2017, Ural University Press. All rights reserved. This article reflects on a recent spate of books...
Following the lead of George Scheetz in compiling lists of words with a common ending, I have chosen...
The article Words into Numbers in the February 1977 issue of Word Ways introduced transadditions o...
The first article in this series concerned itself with the shortest and the longest American place n...
This is an age of extreme specialization. No longer can the general practitioner of logology aspire ...
Greetings from glamorous Guam!With a truly miraculous sense of detachment and aloofness possible onl...
If you are finding it a bit monotonous to put Dateline, Anywhere, U.S.A. on every letter you write, ...
One of my favorite pastimes is gathering together words that share an interesting suffix -- or perha...
In Word Ways in November 1973, Dmitri Borgmann searched for names of U.S. Cities, towns, or villages...
In my forthcoming book on onomastics, What\u27s in a Name? from Genealogical Publishers of Baltimo...
The November 1973 issue of Word Ways comments on the relative paucity of new word palindromes in the...
The accurate automated identification of named places is a major concern for scholars in the digital...
© 2017, Ural University Press. All rights reserved. This article reflects on a recent spate of books...
Word Ways has frequently explored the oddities of United States placenames, in such major articles a...
© 2017, Ural University Press. All rights reserved. This article reflects on a recent spate of books...
© 2017, Ural University Press. All rights reserved. This article reflects on a recent spate of books...
Following the lead of George Scheetz in compiling lists of words with a common ending, I have chosen...
The article Words into Numbers in the February 1977 issue of Word Ways introduced transadditions o...
The first article in this series concerned itself with the shortest and the longest American place n...
This is an age of extreme specialization. No longer can the general practitioner of logology aspire ...
Greetings from glamorous Guam!With a truly miraculous sense of detachment and aloofness possible onl...
If you are finding it a bit monotonous to put Dateline, Anywhere, U.S.A. on every letter you write, ...
One of my favorite pastimes is gathering together words that share an interesting suffix -- or perha...
In Word Ways in November 1973, Dmitri Borgmann searched for names of U.S. Cities, towns, or villages...
In my forthcoming book on onomastics, What\u27s in a Name? from Genealogical Publishers of Baltimo...
The November 1973 issue of Word Ways comments on the relative paucity of new word palindromes in the...
The accurate automated identification of named places is a major concern for scholars in the digital...
© 2017, Ural University Press. All rights reserved. This article reflects on a recent spate of books...
Word Ways has frequently explored the oddities of United States placenames, in such major articles a...
© 2017, Ural University Press. All rights reserved. This article reflects on a recent spate of books...
© 2017, Ural University Press. All rights reserved. This article reflects on a recent spate of books...
Following the lead of George Scheetz in compiling lists of words with a common ending, I have chosen...
The article Words into Numbers in the February 1977 issue of Word Ways introduced transadditions o...