Generally, the problems posed in other sections of our Journal are for the seasoned veteran of the word wars. In this section, we are presenting substantially easier puzzles and quizzes, as an encouragement to neophytes, those intrepid souls just beginning their study of the ways of the word
In order to understand the limits of recreational linguistics, and in order to identify unsuspected ...
In A New Logology Cash Contest in the May 1974 issue of Word Ways, Ralph Beaman invited readers to...
In a desperate attempt to make ever-larger word squares, logologists have succeeded only in producin...
Generally, the problems posed in other sections of our Journal are for the seasoned veteran of word ...
Some of you may have felt that the crossword puzzle offered in the first issue of WORD WAYS was unre...
Listed below are 34 kinds of word puzzles, games and curiosities, each one in scrambled form. Your ...
In this article, we introduce Word Ways readers to the wordplay miniature -- a special form of the f...
The letter B occurs, on average, once in every hundred letters of standard English prose. So, too, ...
The most reliable characteristic of our Super-Quizzes is their unpredictability. The first three wer...
In Mathematical Mind-Benders, Peter Winkler. Wellesley, MA: A.K. Peters, 2007. Reprinted by permissi...
Word Ways has presented a great many challenges, explicit and implicit, since 1968; many were never ...
The following puzzles are excerpted from a book entitled Word Puzzles to be published by Dembner Ent...
Webster\u27s Dictionary defines colloquy as mutual discourse. Readers are encouraged to submit addit...
In the November 1972 Word Ways, we presented an article entitled One-Letter Words which demonstrat...
You are working on a crossword puzzle and the grid shows _EAR. Without an additional clue you woul...
In order to understand the limits of recreational linguistics, and in order to identify unsuspected ...
In A New Logology Cash Contest in the May 1974 issue of Word Ways, Ralph Beaman invited readers to...
In a desperate attempt to make ever-larger word squares, logologists have succeeded only in producin...
Generally, the problems posed in other sections of our Journal are for the seasoned veteran of word ...
Some of you may have felt that the crossword puzzle offered in the first issue of WORD WAYS was unre...
Listed below are 34 kinds of word puzzles, games and curiosities, each one in scrambled form. Your ...
In this article, we introduce Word Ways readers to the wordplay miniature -- a special form of the f...
The letter B occurs, on average, once in every hundred letters of standard English prose. So, too, ...
The most reliable characteristic of our Super-Quizzes is their unpredictability. The first three wer...
In Mathematical Mind-Benders, Peter Winkler. Wellesley, MA: A.K. Peters, 2007. Reprinted by permissi...
Word Ways has presented a great many challenges, explicit and implicit, since 1968; many were never ...
The following puzzles are excerpted from a book entitled Word Puzzles to be published by Dembner Ent...
Webster\u27s Dictionary defines colloquy as mutual discourse. Readers are encouraged to submit addit...
In the November 1972 Word Ways, we presented an article entitled One-Letter Words which demonstrat...
You are working on a crossword puzzle and the grid shows _EAR. Without an additional clue you woul...
In order to understand the limits of recreational linguistics, and in order to identify unsuspected ...
In A New Logology Cash Contest in the May 1974 issue of Word Ways, Ralph Beaman invited readers to...
In a desperate attempt to make ever-larger word squares, logologists have succeeded only in producin...