The local newspaper has just featured the 39,417,268th crossword puzzle to be published in the United States since the beginning of that pastime shortly before the start of World War I. If you are as tired of crossword puzzles as we are, then you are ready to move on to more refined puzzles of the genuine, logological variety. We commend the one that follows to your attention
Before plunging into new territory, we pause to take note of a congeries of addenda to subjects prob...
In the February 2002 Word Ways I explored trandeletions and transadditions of the names of the state...
If you are finding it a bit monotonous to put Dateline, Anywhere, U.S.A. on every letter you write, ...
The pages of Word Ways have frequently featured articles and quizzes concerned with the logological ...
Often, while searching through atlases and gazetteers of the United States, we have been surprised a...
Most people are reasonably familiar with the two-letter abbreviations for state names introduced by ...
Word play involving the names of the fifty states, or their US Post Office abbreviations, has freque...
For the dedicated logologist, it has always been an article of faith that every English word and nam...
Here are words (all beginning with A, B or C to make things a bit easier) which have been derived fr...
Toponym resolution, or grounding names of places to their actual locations, is an important problem ...
The first article in this series concerned itself with the shortest and the longest American place n...
Greetings from glamorous Guam!With a truly miraculous sense of detachment and aloofness possible onl...
In previous issues readers have been challenged to think of words which are composed of the two-lett...
We love transpositions, especially of complete sets of words and names, or nearly complete sets. Wor...
Recently, Darryl Francis found words from the letter banks of the chemical elements and the states o...
Before plunging into new territory, we pause to take note of a congeries of addenda to subjects prob...
In the February 2002 Word Ways I explored trandeletions and transadditions of the names of the state...
If you are finding it a bit monotonous to put Dateline, Anywhere, U.S.A. on every letter you write, ...
The pages of Word Ways have frequently featured articles and quizzes concerned with the logological ...
Often, while searching through atlases and gazetteers of the United States, we have been surprised a...
Most people are reasonably familiar with the two-letter abbreviations for state names introduced by ...
Word play involving the names of the fifty states, or their US Post Office abbreviations, has freque...
For the dedicated logologist, it has always been an article of faith that every English word and nam...
Here are words (all beginning with A, B or C to make things a bit easier) which have been derived fr...
Toponym resolution, or grounding names of places to their actual locations, is an important problem ...
The first article in this series concerned itself with the shortest and the longest American place n...
Greetings from glamorous Guam!With a truly miraculous sense of detachment and aloofness possible onl...
In previous issues readers have been challenged to think of words which are composed of the two-lett...
We love transpositions, especially of complete sets of words and names, or nearly complete sets. Wor...
Recently, Darryl Francis found words from the letter banks of the chemical elements and the states o...
Before plunging into new territory, we pause to take note of a congeries of addenda to subjects prob...
In the February 2002 Word Ways I explored trandeletions and transadditions of the names of the state...
If you are finding it a bit monotonous to put Dateline, Anywhere, U.S.A. on every letter you write, ...