Since my first report on the attempt to construct a modern tautonymic 10 x 10 word square, Darryl H. Francis and I have continued to work on the project, and we are happy to report a second solution to the problem. The new word square overcomes all of the esthetic objections leveled against our first effort, and exhibits other improvements as well
In a desperate attempt to make ever-larger word squares, logologists have succeeded only in producin...
Shouldn\u27t a word square be a square array of words rather than a square array of letters? In Ma...
Considering the enormous difficulties encountered in the construction of large word squares, it is n...
In the February 1973 issue of Word Ways, I posed the problem of constructing a tautonymic 10 x 10 wo...
When I read Dmitri Borgmann\u27s article on 100-letter tautonymic word squares in the November 1973 ...
In the May 1988 Word Ways I described my struggle to construct a non-tautonymic ten-square -- with l...
The following 11-by-11 word square appears in Language on Vacation (Scribner\u27s, 1965), and is des...
What is the largest number of different letters that can be used in a word square? For word squares ...
It is nearly 85 years since the first ten-square was published. American National Puzzlers\u27 Leag...
The history of word square construction in the United States has largely been one of the strenuous a...
The original ASTRALISED ten-square in the November 1990 Word Ways, and the modified DISTALISED squar...
More than ten years have passed since In Search of the Ten-Square appeared in the November 1990 Wo...
It is exactly five years ago since Ars Magna: The Ten-Square appeared in Word Ways. This article ...
At the end of my article Hunting the Ten-Square (May 2004 Word Ways) I said that about one million...
The following squares are, in my view, the approximate equal, or superior of, the square published a...
In a desperate attempt to make ever-larger word squares, logologists have succeeded only in producin...
Shouldn\u27t a word square be a square array of words rather than a square array of letters? In Ma...
Considering the enormous difficulties encountered in the construction of large word squares, it is n...
In the February 1973 issue of Word Ways, I posed the problem of constructing a tautonymic 10 x 10 wo...
When I read Dmitri Borgmann\u27s article on 100-letter tautonymic word squares in the November 1973 ...
In the May 1988 Word Ways I described my struggle to construct a non-tautonymic ten-square -- with l...
The following 11-by-11 word square appears in Language on Vacation (Scribner\u27s, 1965), and is des...
What is the largest number of different letters that can be used in a word square? For word squares ...
It is nearly 85 years since the first ten-square was published. American National Puzzlers\u27 Leag...
The history of word square construction in the United States has largely been one of the strenuous a...
The original ASTRALISED ten-square in the November 1990 Word Ways, and the modified DISTALISED squar...
More than ten years have passed since In Search of the Ten-Square appeared in the November 1990 Wo...
It is exactly five years ago since Ars Magna: The Ten-Square appeared in Word Ways. This article ...
At the end of my article Hunting the Ten-Square (May 2004 Word Ways) I said that about one million...
The following squares are, in my view, the approximate equal, or superior of, the square published a...
In a desperate attempt to make ever-larger word squares, logologists have succeeded only in producin...
Shouldn\u27t a word square be a square array of words rather than a square array of letters? In Ma...
Considering the enormous difficulties encountered in the construction of large word squares, it is n...