For the dedicated logologist, it has always been an article of faith that every English word and name can be transposed into some other word or name, or into a cohesive group of words functioning as the equivalent of a single word or name, imparting a unified meaning, clearly and grammatically. For a word or name to defy transposition would be an act of treason, so to speak. With such defiance virtually unthinkable, the validity of the belief itself has never been put to an objective test
At one time or another, everybody is asked to sign an autograph book, a school yearbook, a wedding b...
It has often been said that an institution is merely the lengthened shadow of a man. Logology in gen...
Greetings from glamorous Guam!With a truly miraculous sense of detachment and aloofness possible onl...
A recent word ways article by Philip M. Cohen (May, 1980) enunciates a new logological concept. For ...
Varied and far-flung are the concerns of logology. The kaleidoscopic diversity of the problems to wh...
As I survey the logological scene from my ivory tower, I am dismayed by what I observe. It appears t...
In the February \u2777 Word Ways (77-8), Dmitri Borgmann proposed as the keystone of logology that a...
All English words and names -- all, without a single exception -- are logologically interesting
In Language on Vacation (1965), I presented 17 transposals of the 9 letters ACEINORST. For the ti...
In an article in the February 1977 issue of Word Ways, I asserted that all English words and names, ...
It had to happen. The recent trivia craze sweeping the nation has finally invaded the sacred precinc...
Over the years Word Ways has displayed a varied logological corpus. In this column I revisit forgott...
Recent developments in logology compel me to come out of retirement, setting the record straight. Ar...
In the August 1972 issue of Word Ways, Darryl H. Francis shook the world of logology to its very fou...
Three Word Ways articles have been written by Dmitri Borgmann (February and May 1977) and Pamela Bra...
At one time or another, everybody is asked to sign an autograph book, a school yearbook, a wedding b...
It has often been said that an institution is merely the lengthened shadow of a man. Logology in gen...
Greetings from glamorous Guam!With a truly miraculous sense of detachment and aloofness possible onl...
A recent word ways article by Philip M. Cohen (May, 1980) enunciates a new logological concept. For ...
Varied and far-flung are the concerns of logology. The kaleidoscopic diversity of the problems to wh...
As I survey the logological scene from my ivory tower, I am dismayed by what I observe. It appears t...
In the February \u2777 Word Ways (77-8), Dmitri Borgmann proposed as the keystone of logology that a...
All English words and names -- all, without a single exception -- are logologically interesting
In Language on Vacation (1965), I presented 17 transposals of the 9 letters ACEINORST. For the ti...
In an article in the February 1977 issue of Word Ways, I asserted that all English words and names, ...
It had to happen. The recent trivia craze sweeping the nation has finally invaded the sacred precinc...
Over the years Word Ways has displayed a varied logological corpus. In this column I revisit forgott...
Recent developments in logology compel me to come out of retirement, setting the record straight. Ar...
In the August 1972 issue of Word Ways, Darryl H. Francis shook the world of logology to its very fou...
Three Word Ways articles have been written by Dmitri Borgmann (February and May 1977) and Pamela Bra...
At one time or another, everybody is asked to sign an autograph book, a school yearbook, a wedding b...
It has often been said that an institution is merely the lengthened shadow of a man. Logology in gen...
Greetings from glamorous Guam!With a truly miraculous sense of detachment and aloofness possible onl...