Seymour's Cryptoquotes - Language Cryptograms


Book Description

Decode Language Quotes 160 witty insights and funny observations from polyglots, linguists, celebrities, and authors are encrypted in this book, waiting for you to decode them. Hours of entertainment in solving each puzzle to reveal a language related quote.The cryptoquotes are sorted in order of difficulty, from least to most. There are three sets of hints to the answers given at the front and solutions to all puzzles are in the back.This is an excellent book for people of all ages who just can't get enough of cryptograms and word puzzles! It's a wonderful way to exercise the brain and have fun with language learning.




Seymour's Cryptoquotes - Humorous Cryptograms


Book Description

Unlock the Laughter 240 witty observations and funny sayings from such masters of laughter as Steven Wright, Oscar Wilde, and Albert Einstein are encrypted in this book, waiting for you to decode them. You will be entertained for hours as you solve each puzzle to reveal an amusing quote. The cryptoquotes are sorted in order of difficulty, from least to most. There are three sets of hints to the answers given at the front and solutions to all puzzles are in the back. This is an excellent book for people of all ages who just can't get enough of cryptograms and word puzzles! It's a wonderful way to exercise both the brain and the funny bone.




Seymour's Cryptoquotes - Inspirational and Wise Cryptograms


Book Description

Unlock the Wisdom 240 inspiring and insightful quotations from people of all walks of life, such as Abraham Lincoln, Isaac Asimov, Eleanor Roosevelt, Francis of Assisi, and Alexander the Great, are encrypted in this book, waiting for you to decode them. You will be entertained for hours as you solve each puzzle to reveal an uplifting passage or alternative way of looking at the world. The cryptoquotes are sorted in order of difficulty, from least to most. There are three sets of hints to the answers given at the front and solutions to all puzzles are in the back. This is an excellent book for people of all ages who just can't get enough of cryptograms and word puzzles! It's a wonderful way to exercise the brain and lift the heart. In large print.




Seymour's Cryptoquotes - Humorous Cryptograms


Book Description

Unlock the Laughter 240 witty observations and funny sayings from such masters of laughter as Steven Wright, Oscar Wilde, and Albert Einstein are encrypted in this book, waiting for you to decode them. You will be entertained for hours as you solve each puzzle to reveal an amusing quote. The cryptoquotes are sorted in order of difficulty, from least to most. There are three sets of hints to the answers given at the front and solutions to all puzzles are in the back. This is an excellent book for people of all ages who just can't get enough of cryptograms and word puzzles! It's a wonderful way to exercise both the brain and the funny bone.




The Cryptogram


Book Description




A Treatise on the Astrolabe


Book Description

A Treatise the Astrolabe by Geoffrey Chaucer is the work of an avid amateur astronomer who happened also to be England’s greatest medieval poet. A user of the astrolabe can plot the movement of the stars, tell time, and calculate numerous other results. Chaucer translated and revised a standard Latin treatment of the astrolabe. His treatise, which is generally regarded as one of the first technical manuals in English and a model of how technical manuals should be written. Not since 1872 has a free-standing edition of A Treatise the Astrolabe been published. Thanks to the expertise of its editor, Sigmund Eisner, who supplies sixty-eight illustrations, this Variorum edition provides a more detailed exposition than previously available. Eisner’s extensive labors result in the first complete record of textual variants found in the thirty-two surviving manuscripts of the work and in all the major printed text published between 1532 and 1987. This landmark edition also presents a thorough digest of all published commentary on Chaucer’s treatise. Amplified by sixty-eight illustrations, this variorum edition of Chaucer’s A Treatise on the Astrolabe provides a more detailed exposition of the treatise than has ever before been available.




The Shakespearean Ciphers Examined


Book Description

The authors address theories, which, through the identification of hidden codes, call the authorship of Shakespeare's plays into question.




Humorous Cryptograms


Book Description

"A collection of 400 witty or humorous quotations along with their authors' names...have been enciphered into simple substitution ciphers with retained word divisions. Authors include Groucho Marx, Andy Rooney, Bill Cosby, David Letterman, Bob Hope, Emma Bombeck and many more....Excellent and...fun."--Cryptologia. If stuck, get help from special clue sections. 128 pages, 5 3/8 x 8 1/4.




Common LISP


Book Description

Highly accessible treatment covers cons cell structures, evaluation rules, programs as data, recursive and applicable programming styles. Nearly 400 illustrations, answers to exercises, "toolkit" sections, and a variety of complete programs. 1990 edition.




Constituent and Pattern in Poetry


Book Description

Constituent and Pattern in Poetry is a collection of essays on literature and language. It is built on the assumption that works of literature have existence in the real world and that they may be analyzed in a fashion that is not totally subjective. Using models derived from structural linguistics, Archibald A. Hill presents a number of theoretical contributions to the study of poetry, as well as new ways of looking at specific poems. The book as a whole provides an overview of the tools and ideas Hill has developed for analyzing works of literature, and it is the first time the essays have been gathered together in one volume. The book is divided into three sections: Definition of Literature and Study of Its Patterns, Types of Meaning and Imagery, and Principles for Interpreting Meaning. Each section opens with a theoretical essay, followed by three essays that work analytically with specific poets and poems using the methods defined in the first. In his examination of such poets as Hopkins, Browning, Milton, Blake, Keats, and Dickinson, Hill uses such proposals as the law of least lexical contribution and maximal contextual contribution; the hypothesis that, when possible meanings occur together in a cluster, they support each other; and the idea that it is sometimes possible to recover underlying language sequences from which the author has departed for identifiable reasons. By applying these suppositions to the study of particular poems, Hill shows how the reader may arrive at statements about the relative artistic merit of works of literature.