fbpx
Wikipedia

Crossword

A crossword (or crossword puzzle) is a word game consisting of a grid of black and white squares, into which solvers enter words or phrases ("entries") crossing each other horizontally ("across") and vertically ("down") according to a set of clues. Each white square is typically filled with one letter, while the black squares are used to separate entries. The first white square in each entry is typically numbered to correspond to its clue.

An American-style crossword grid layout

Crosswords commonly appear in newspapers and magazines. The earliest crosswords that resemble their modern form were popularized by the New York World in the 1910s. Many variants of crosswords are popular around the world, including cryptic crosswords and many language-specific variants.

American-style crosswords edit

 
A person works on a crossword puzzle in the New York City Subway, 2008

Crossword grids such as those appearing in most North American newspapers and magazines consist mainly of solid regions of uninterrupted white squares, separated more sparsely by shaded squares. Every letter is "checked" (i.e. is part of both an "across" word and a "down" word) and usually each answer must contain at least three letters. In such puzzles shaded squares are typically limited to about one-sixth of the total. Crossword grids elsewhere, such as in Britain, South Africa, India and Australia, have a lattice-like structure, with a higher percentage of shaded squares (around 25%), leaving about half the letters in an answer unchecked. For example, if the top row has an answer running all the way across, there will often be no across answers in the second row.

Another tradition in puzzle design (in North America, India, and Britain particularly) is that the grid should have 180-degree rotational symmetry, so that its pattern appears the same if the paper is turned upside down. Most puzzle designs also require that all white cells be orthogonally contiguous (that is, connected in one mass through shared sides, to form a single polyomino).

Substantial variants from the usual forms exist. Two of the common ones are barred crosswords, which use bold lines between squares (instead of shaded squares) to separate answers, and circular designs, with answers entered either radially or in concentric circles. "Free form" crosswords ("criss-cross" puzzles), which have simple, asymmetric designs, are often seen on school worksheets, children's menus, and other entertainment for children. Grids forming shapes other than squares are also occasionally used.

Puzzles are often one of several standard sizes. For example, many weekday newspaper puzzles (such as the American New York Times crossword puzzle) are 15×15 squares, while weekend puzzles may be 21×21, 23×23, or 25×25. The New York Times puzzles also set a common pattern for American crosswords by increasing in difficulty throughout the week: their Monday puzzles are the easiest and the puzzles get harder each day until Saturday. Their larger Sunday puzzle is about the same level of difficulty as a weekday-size Thursday puzzle.[1] This has led U.S. solvers to use the day of the week as a shorthand when describing how hard a puzzle is: e.g. an easy puzzle may be referred to as a "Monday" or a "Tuesday", a medium-difficulty puzzle as a "Wednesday", and a truly difficult puzzle as a "Saturday".

Typically clues appear outside the grid, divided into an across list and a down list; the first cell of each entry contains a number referenced by the clue lists. For example, the answer to a clue labeled "17 Down" is entered with the first letter in the cell numbered "17", proceeding down from there. Numbers are almost never repeated; numbered cells are numbered consecutively, usually from left to right across each row, starting with the top row and proceeding downward. Some Japanese crosswords are numbered from top to bottom down each column, starting with the leftmost column and proceeding right.

Clues: conventions and types edit

American-style crossword clues, called straight or quick clues by those more familiar with cryptic puzzles, are often simple definitions of the answers. Often, a straight clue is not in itself sufficient to distinguish between several possible answers, either because multiple synonymous answers may fit or because the clue itself is a homonym (e.g., "Lead" as in to be ahead in a contest or "Lead" as in the element), so the solver must make use of checks to establish the correct answer with certainty. For example, the answer to the clue "PC key" for a three-letter answer could be ESC, ALT, TAB, DEL, or INS, so until a check is filled in, giving at least one of the letters, the correct answer cannot be determined.

In most American-style crosswords,[2] the majority of the clues in the puzzle are straight clues,[3] with the remainder being one of the other types described below.

Crossword clues are generally consistent with the solutions. For instance, clues and their solutions should always agree in tense, number, and degree.[4] If a clue is in the past tense, so is the answer: thus "Traveled on horseback" would be a valid clue for the solution RODE, but not for RIDE. Similarly, "Family members" would be a valid clue for AUNTS but not UNCLE, while "More joyful" could clue HAPPIER but not HAPPIEST.

Capitalization edit

Capitalization of answer letters is conventionally ignored; crossword puzzles are typically filled in, and their answer sheets published, in all caps. This ensures a proper name can have its initial capital letter checked with a non-capitalizable letter in the intersecting clue.

Some clue examples:

  • Fill-in-the-blank clues are often the easiest in a puzzle and a good place to start solving, e.g., "_____ Boleyn" = ANNE.
  • A question mark at the end of clue usually signals that the clue/answer combination involves some sort of pun or wordplay, e.g., "Grateful?" = ASHES, since a grate might be full of them.
  • Most widely distributed American crosswords today (e.g., The New York Times, The Washington Post, The Boston Globe, USA Today, etc.) also contain colloquial answers, i.e., entries in the puzzle grid that try to replicate everyday colloquial language. In such a puzzle one might see phrases such as WHAT'S UP, AS IF, or WHADDYA WANT.

Abbreviations edit

The constraints of the American-style grid (in which every letter is checked) often require a fair number of answers not to be dictionary words. As a result, the following ways to clue abbreviations and other non-words, although they can be found in "straight" British crosswords, are much more common in American ones:

  • Abbreviations, the use of a foreign language, variant spellings, or other unusual word tricks are indicated in the clue. A crossword creator might choose to clue the answer SEN (as in the abbreviation for "senator") as "Washington bigwig: Abbr." or "Member of Cong.", with the abbreviation in the clue indicating that the answer is to be similarly abbreviated.[5] The use of "Var." indicates the answer is a variant spelling (e.g., EMEER instead of EMIR), while the use of foreign language or a foreign place name within the clue indicates that the answer is also in a foreign language. For example, ETE (été, French for "summer") might be clued as "Summer, in the Sorbonne". ROMA could be clued as "Italia's capital", whereas the clue "Italy's capital" would indicate the English spelling Rome.
  • The eight possible abbreviations for a position on a compass, e.g., NNW (north-northwest) or ESE (east-southeast), occur with some frequency. They can be clued as simply "Compass point", where the desired answer is determined by a combination of logic—since the third letter can be only E or W, and the second letter can be only N or S—and a process of elimination using checks. Alternatively, compass point answers are more frequently clued as "XXX to YYY direction", where XXX and YYY are two place names. For example, SSW might be clued as "New York to Washington DC dir". Similarly, a clue such as "Right on the map" means EAST. A clue could also consist of objects that point a direction, e.g., "vane dir." or "windsock dir.".
  • Roman numerals, and arithmetic involving them, frequently appear as well; the clue "IV times III" (4×3) would yield XII (12).
  • In addition, partial answers are allowed in American-style crosswords, where the answer represents part of a longer phrase. For example, the clue "Mind your _____ Qs" gives the answer PSAND (Ps and).
  • Non-dictionary phrases are also allowed in answers. Thus, the clue "Mocked" could result in the grid entry LAUGHED AT.

Themes edit

Many American crossword puzzles feature a "theme" consisting of a number of long entries (generally three to five in a standard 15×15-square "weekday-size" puzzle) that share some relationship, type of pun, or other element in common. As an example, the New York Times crossword of April 26, 2005 by Sarah Keller, edited by Will Shortz, featured five themed entries ending in the different parts of a tree: SQUAREROOT, TABLELEAF, WARDROBETRUNK, BRAINSTEM, and BANKBRANCH.

The above is an example of a category theme, where the theme elements are all members of the same set. Other types of themes include:

  • Quote themes, featuring a famous quote broken up into parts to fit in the grid (and usually clued as "Quote, part 1", "Quote, part 2", etc.)
  • Rebus themes, where multiple letters or even symbols occupy a single square in the puzzle (e.g., BERMUDAΔ)
  • Addition themes, where theme entries are created by adding a letter, letters, or word(s) to an existing word or phrase. For example, "Crucial pool shot?" = CRITICAL MASSE (formed by taking the phrase "critical mass" and adding an "e" on the end. All the theme entries in a given puzzle must be formed by the same process (so another entry might be "Greco-Roman buddy?" = WRESTLING MATE—"wrestling mat" with an "e" added on). An example of a multiple-letter addition (and one that does not occur at the end of the entry) might be "Crazy about kitchen storage?" = CABINET FEVER (derived from "cabin fever").[6]
  • Subtraction themes, the reverse of the above, where letters are removed to make a new word or phrase.[6]
  • Compound themes, where the starts or ends of the theme entries can all precede or follow another word, which is given elsewhere in the puzzle. For example, a puzzle with theme entries that begin with PAPER, BALL, and WATER and elsewhere in the puzzle, the word BOY clued as "Word that can follow the start of [theme entries]".[6]
  • Anniversary or tribute themes, commemorating a specific person, place, or event. For example, on October 7, 2011 The New York Times crossword commemorated the life of Apple CEO Steve Jobs who had died on October 5. Theme entries related to Jobs' life included MACINTOSH, PIXAR, THINK DIFFERENT, CREATIVE GENIUS, STEVE JOBS, and APPLE.[6][7]
  • Synonym themes, where the theme entries all contain synonyms, e.g., a Los Angeles Times puzzle featuring a set of theme entries that contain the words RAVEN, JET, EBONY, and SABLE, all synonyms for "black"[6]
  • Numerous other types have been identified, including spoonerisms, poems, shifted letters, rhyming phrases, puns, homophones, and combinations of two or more of other types of themes.[6]

The Simon & Schuster Crossword Puzzle Series has published many unusual themed crosswords. "Rosetta Stone", by Sam Bellotto Jr., incorporates a Caesar cipher cryptogram as the theme; the key to breaking the cipher is the answer to 1 across. Another unusual theme requires the solver to use the answer to a clue as another clue. The answer to that clue is the real solution.

Indirect clues edit

Many puzzles feature clues involving wordplay which are to be taken metaphorically or in some sense other than their literal meaning, requiring some form of lateral thinking. Depending on the puzzle creator or the editor, this might be represented either with a question mark at the end of the clue or with a modifier such as "maybe" or "perhaps". In more difficult puzzles, the indicator may be omitted, increasing ambiguity between a literal meaning and a wordplay meaning. Examples:

  • "Half a dance" could clue CAN (half of CANCAN) or CHA (half of CHACHA).
  • If taken literally, "Start of spring" could clue MAR (for March), but it could also clue ESS, the spelled-out form of the starting letter S.
  • "Nice summer?" clues ETE, summer in Nice, France (été being French for "summer"), rather than a nice (pleasant) summer. This clue also takes advantage of the fact that in American-style crosswords, the initial letter of a clue is always capitalized, whether or not it is a proper noun. In this clue, the initial capitalization further obscures whether the clue is referring to "nice" as in "pleasant" or "Nice" as in the French city.
  • "Pay addition", taken literally, clues BONUS. When taken as an indirect clue, however, it could also clue OLA (the addition of -ola to pay- results in PAYOLA).

Other clue variations edit

Any type of puzzle may contain cross-references, where the answer to one clue forms part of another clue, in which it is referred to by number and direction. E.g., a puzzle might have 1-across clued as "Central character in The Lord of the Rings" = FRODO, with 17-down clued as "Precious object for 1-Across" = RING.

When an answer is composed of multiple or hyphenated words, some crosswords (especially in Britain) indicate the structure of the answer. For example, "(3,5)" after a clue indicates that the answer is composed of a three-letter word followed by a five-letter word. Most American-style crosswords do not provide this information.

Metapuzzles edit

Some crossword designers have started including a metapuzzle, or "meta" for short, a second puzzle within the completed puzzle.[8] After the player has correctly solved the crossword puzzle in the usual fashion, the solution forms the basis of a second puzzle. The designer usually includes a hint to the metapuzzle. For instance, the puzzle Eight Isn't Enough by Matt Gaffney gives the clue "This week's contest answer is a three-word phrase whose second word is 'or'."[9] The crossword solution includes the entries "BROUGHT TO NAUGHT", "MIGHT MAKES RIGHT", "CAUGHT A STRAIGHT", and "HEIGHT AND WEIGHT", which are all three-word phrases with two words ending in -ght. The solution to the meta is a similar phrase in which the middle word is "or": "FIGHT OR FLIGHT".

Since September 2015, the Wall Street Journal Friday crossword has featured a crossword contest metapuzzle, with the prize of a WSJ mug going to a reader randomly chosen from among those submitting the correct answer.[10][11]

Schrödinger or quantum puzzles edit

Some puzzle grids contain more than one correct answer for the same set of clues. These are called Schrödinger or quantum puzzles, alluding to the Schrödinger's Cat thought experiment in quantum physics.[12] Schrödinger puzzles have frequently been published in venues including Fireball Crosswords and The American Values Club Crosswords, and at least ten have appeared in The New York Times since the late 1980s.[13]

 
Clinton/Bob Dole puzzle from 1996

The daily New York Times puzzle for November 5, 1996, by Jeremiah Farrell, had a clue for 39 across that read "Lead story in tomorrow's newspaper, with 43 Across (!)."[14] The answer for 43 across was ELECTED; depending on the outcome of that day's Presidential Election, the answer for 39 across would have been correct with either CLINTON or BOBDOLE, as would each of the corresponding down answers.[15] On September 1, 2016, the daily New York Times puzzle by Ben Tausig had four squares which led to correct answers reading both across and down if solvers entered either "M" or "F".[16] The puzzle's theme, GENDERFLUID, was revealed at 37 across in the center of the puzzle: "Having a variable identity, as suggested by four squares in this puzzle."[17]

Cryptic crosswords edit

 
A lattice-style grid common for cryptic crosswords

In cryptic crosswords, the clues are puzzles in themselves. A typical clue contains both a definition at the beginning or end of the clue and wordplay, which provides a way to manufacture the word indicated by the definition, and which may not parse logically. Cryptics usually give the length of their answers in parentheses after the clue, which is especially useful with multi-word answers. Certain signs indicate different forms of wordplay. Solving cryptics is harder to learn than standard crosswords, as learning to interpret the different types of cryptic clues can take some practice. In Great Britain and throughout much of the Commonwealth, cryptics of varying degrees of difficulty are featured in many newspapers.

The first crosswords with strictly cryptic clues appeared in the 1920s, pioneered by Edward Powys Mathers. He established the principle of cryptic crossword clues.[18] Cryptic crossword clues consist typically of a definition and some type of word play. Cryptic crossword clues need to be viewed two ways. One is a surface reading and one a hidden meaning.[19] The surface reading is the basic reading of the clue to look for key words and how those words are constructed in the clue. The second way is the hidden meaning. This can be a double definition, an anagram, homophone, or words backwards. There are eight main types of clues in cryptic crosswords.[19]

Types of cryptic clues edit

There are several types of wordplay used in cryptics. One is straightforward definition substitution using parts of a word. For example, in one puzzle by Mel Taub, the answer IMPORTANT is given the clue "To bring worker into the country may prove significant". The explanation is that to import means "to bring into the country", the "worker" is a worker ant, and "significant" means important. Here, "significant" is the straight definition (appearing here at the end of the clue), "to bring worker into the country" is the wordplay definition, and "may prove" serves to link the two. Note that in a cryptic clue, there is almost always only one answer that fits both the definition and the wordplay, so that when one sees the answer, one knows that it is the right answer—although it can sometimes be a challenge to figure out why it is the right answer. A good cryptic clue should provide a fair and exact definition of the answer, while at the same time being deliberately misleading.

Another type of wordplay used in cryptics is the use of homophones. For example, the clue "A few, we hear, add up (3)" is the clue for SUM. The straight definition is "add up", meaning "totalize". The solver must guess that "we hear" indicates a homophone, and so a homophone of a synonym of "A few" ("some") is the answer. Other words relating to sound or hearing can be used to signal the presence of a homophone clue (e.g., "aloud", "audibly", "in conversation", etc.).

The double meaning is commonly used as another form of wordplay. For example, "Cat's tongue (7)" is solved by PERSIAN, since this is a type of cat, as well as a tongue, or language. This is the only type of cryptic clue without wordplay—both parts of the clue are a straight definition.

Cryptics often include anagrams, as well. The clue "Ned T.'s seal cooked is rather bland (5,4)" is solved by NEEDS SALT. The straight definition is "is rather bland", and the word "cooked" is a hint to the solver that this clue is an anagram (the letters have been "cooked", or jumbled up). Ignoring all punctuation, "Ned T.'s seal" is an anagram for NEEDS SALT. Besides "cooked", other common hints that the clue contains an anagram are words such as "scrambled", "mixed up", "confused", "baked", or "twisted".

Embedded words are another common trick in cryptics. The clue "Bigotry aside, I'd take him (9)" is solved by APARTHEID. The straight definition is "bigotry", and the wordplay explains itself, indicated by the word "take" (since one word "takes" another): "aside" means APART and I'd is simply ID, so APART and ID "take" HE (which is, in cryptic crossword usage, a perfectly good synonym for "him"). The answer could be elucidated as APART(HE)ID.

Another common clue type is the "hidden clue" or "container", where the answer is hidden in the text of the clue itself. For example, "Made a dug-out, buried, and passed away (4)" is solved by DEAD. The answer is written in the clue: "maDE A Dug-out". "Buried" indicates that the answer is embedded within the clue.

There are numerous other forms of wordplay found in cryptic clues. Backwards words can be indicated by words like "climbing", "retreating", or "ascending" (depending on whether it is an across clue or a down clue) or by directional indicators such as "going North" (meaning upwards) or "West" (right-to-left); letters can be replaced or removed with indicators such as "nothing rather than excellence" (meaning replace E in a word with O); the letter I can be indicated by "me" or "one;" the letter O can be indicated by "nought", "nothing", "zero", or "a ring" (since it visually resembles one); the letter X might be clued as "a cross", or "ten" (as in the Roman numeral), or "an illiterate's signature", or "sounds like your old flame" (homophone for "ex"). "Senselessness" is solved by "e", because "e" is what remains after removing (less) "ness" from "sense".

With the different types of wordplay and definition possibilities, the composer of a cryptic puzzle is presented with many different possible ways to clue a given answer. Most desirable are clues that are clean but deceptive, with a smooth surface reading (that is, the resulting clue looks as natural a phrase as possible). The Usenet newsgroup rec.puzzles.crosswords has a number of clueing competitions where contestants all submit clues for the same word and a judge picks the best one.

In principle, each cryptic clue is usually sufficient to define its answer uniquely, so it should be possible to answer each clue without use of the grid. In practice, the use of checks is an important aid to the solver.

Other variants edit

These are common crossword variants that vary more from a regular crossword than just an unusual grid shape or unusual clues; these crossword variants may be based on different solving principles and require a different solving skill set.

Cipher crosswords edit

Cipher crosswords were invented in Germany in the 19th century. Published under various trade names (including Code Breakers, Code Crackers, and Kaidoku), and not to be confused with cryptic crosswords (ciphertext puzzles are commonly known as cryptograms), a cipher crossword replaces the clues for each entry with clues for each white cell of the grid—an integer from 1 to 26 inclusive is printed in the corner of each. The objective, as any other crossword, is to determine the proper letter for each cell; in a cipher crossword, the 26 numbers serve as a cipher for those letters: cells that share matching numbers are filled with matching letters, and no two numbers stand for the same letter. All resultant entries must be valid words. Usually, at least one number's letter is given at the outset. English-language cipher crosswords are nearly always pangrammatic (all letters of the alphabet appear in the solution). As these puzzles are closer to codes than quizzes, they require a different skillset; many basic cryptographic techniques, such as determining likely vowels, are key to solving these. Given their pangrammaticity, a frequent start point is locating where 'Q' and 'U' must appear.

Diagramless crosswords edit

In a diagramless crossword, often called a diagramless for short or, in the UK, a skeleton crossword or carte blanche, the grid offers overall dimensions, but the locations of most of the clue numbers and shaded squares are unspecified. A solver must deduce not only the answers to individual clues, but how to fit together partially built-up clumps of answers into larger clumps with properly set shaded squares. Some of these puzzles follow the traditional symmetry rule, others have left-right mirror symmetry, and others have greater levels of symmetry or outlines suggesting other shapes. If the symmetry of the grid is given, the solver can use it to his/her advantage.

Fill-in crosswords edit

A fill-in crossword (also known as crusadex or cruzadex) features a grid and the full list of words to be entered in that grid, but does not give explicit clues for where each word goes. The challenge is figuring out how to integrate the list of words together within the grid so that all intersections of words are valid. Fill-in crosswords may often have longer word length than regular crosswords to make the crossword easier to solve, and symmetry is often disregarded. Fitting together several long words is easier than fitting together several short words because there are fewer possibilities for how the long words intersect together. These types of crosswords are also used to demonstrate artificial intelligence abilities, such as finding solutions to the puzzle based on a set of determined constraints.[20]

Cross-figures edit

A cross-figure or crossnumber is the numerical analogy of a crossword, in which the solutions to the clues are numbers instead of words. Clues are usually arithmetical expressions, but can also be general knowledge clues to which the answer is a number or year. There are also numerical fill-in crosswords.

Acrostic puzzles edit

An acrostic is a type of word puzzle, in eponymous acrostic form, that typically consists of two parts. The first is a set of lettered clues, each of which has numbered blanks representing the letters of the answer. The second part is a long series of numbered blanks and spaces, representing a quotation or other text, into which the answers for the clues fit. In most forms of the puzzle, the first letters of each correct clue answer, read in order from clue A on down the list, will spell out the author of the quote and the title of the work it is taken from; this can be used as an additional solving aid.

Arroword edit

The arroword is a variant of a crossword that does not have as many black squares as a true crossword, but has arrows inside the grid, with clues preceding the arrows. It has been called the most popular word puzzle in many European countries, and is often called the Scandinavian crossword, as it is believed to have originated in Sweden.[21]

History edit

 
Recreation of Arthur Wynne's original crossword puzzle from December 21, 1913

The phrase "cross word puzzle" was first written in 1862 by Our Young Folks in the United States. Crossword-like puzzles, for example Double Diamond Puzzles, appeared in the magazine St. Nicholas, published since 1873.[22] Another crossword puzzle appeared on September 14, 1890, in the Italian magazine Il Secolo Illustrato della Domenica. It was designed by Giuseppe Airoldi and titled "Per passare il tempo" ("To pass the time"). Airoldi's puzzle was a four-by-four grid with no shaded squares; it included horizontal and vertical clues.[23]

Crosswords in England during the 19th century were of an elementary kind, apparently derived from the word square, a group of words arranged so the letters read alike vertically and horizontally, and printed in children's puzzle books and various periodicals.

On December 21, 1913, Arthur Wynne, a journalist born in Liverpool, England, published a "word-cross" puzzle in the New York World that embodied most of the features of the modern genre. This puzzle is frequently cited as the first crossword puzzle, and Wynne as the inventor. An illustrator later reversed the "word-cross" name to "cross-word".[24][25][26]

Crossword puzzles became a regular weekly feature in the New York World, and spread to other newspapers; the Pittsburgh Press, for example, was publishing them at least as early as 1916[27] and The Boston Globe by 1917.[28]

 
A 1925 Punch cartoon about "The Cross-Word Mania". A man phones his doctor in the middle of the night, asking for "the name of a bodily disorder of seven letters, of which the second letter must be 'N'".

By the 1920s, the crossword phenomenon was starting to attract notice. In October 1922, newspapers published a comic strip by Clare Briggs entitled "Movie of a Man Doing the Cross-Word Puzzle", with an enthusiast muttering "87 across 'Northern Sea Bird'!!??!?!!? Hm-m-m starts with an 'M', second letter is 'U' ... I'll look up all the words starting with an 'M-U ...' mus-musi-mur-murd—Hot Dog! Here 'tis! Murre!"[29] In 1923 a humorous squib in The Boston Globe has a wife ordering her husband to run out and "rescue the papers ... the part I want is blowing down the street." "What is it you're so keen about?" "The Cross-Word Puzzle. Hurry, please, that's a good boy."[30] In The New Yorker's inaugural issue, from 1925, the "Jottings About Town" section observed, "Judging from the number of solvers in the subway and 'L' trains, the crossword puzzle bids fair to become a fad with New Yorkers."[31] Also in 1925, the New York Public Library reported that "The latest craze to strike libraries is the crossword puzzle", and complained that when "the puzzle 'fans' swarm to the dictionaries and encyclopedias so as to drive away readers and students who need these books in their daily work, can there be any doubt of the Library's duty to protect its legitimate readers?"[32]

The first book of crossword puzzles was published by Simon & Schuster in 1924, after a suggestion from co-founder Richard Simon's aunt. The publisher was initially skeptical that the book would succeed, and only printed a small run at first. The book was promoted with an included pencil, and "This odd-looking book with a pencil attached to it"[33] was an instant hit, leading crossword puzzles to become a craze of 1924. To help promote its books, Simon & Schuster also founded the Amateur Cross Word Puzzle League of America, which began the process of developing standards for puzzle design.[26][34]

Not all of the attention drawn to the crossword puzzle fad was positive: A 1924 editorial in The New York Times complained of the "sinful waste in the utterly futile finding of words the letters of which will fit into a prearranged pattern, more or less complex. This is not a game at all, and it hardly can be called a sport ... [solvers] get nothing out of it except a primitive form of mental exercise, and success or failure in any given attempt is equally irrelevant to mental development."[35] A clergyman called the working of crossword puzzles "the mark of a childish mentality" and said, "There is no use for persons to pretend that working one of the puzzles carries any intellectual value with it."[36] However, another wrote a complete Bible Cross-Word Puzzle Book. Also in 1925, Time magazine noted that nine Manhattan dailies and fourteen other big newspapers were carrying crosswords, and quoted opposing views as to whether "This crossword craze will positively end by June!" or "The crossword puzzle is here to stay!"[37] In 1925, The New York Times noted, with approval, a scathing critique of crosswords by The New Republic; but concluded that "Fortunately, the question of whether the puzzles are beneficial or harmful is in no urgent need of an answer. The craze evidently is dying out fast and in a few months it will be forgotten."[38] and in 1929 declared, "The cross-word puzzle, it seems, has gone the way of all fads."[39] In 1930, a correspondent noted that "Together with The Times of London, yours is the only journal of prominence that has never succumbed to the lure of the cross-word puzzle" and said that "The craze—the fad—stage has passed, but there are still people numbering it to the millions who look for their daily cross-word puzzle as regularly as for the weather predictions."[40]

The term "crossword" first appeared in the Oxford English Dictionary in 1933.[41]

The New York Times finally began to publish a crossword puzzle on 15 February 1942, spurred on by the idea that the puzzle could be a welcome distraction from the harsh news of World War II. The New York Times's first puzzle editor was Margaret Petherbridge Farrar, who was editor from 1942 to 1969.[26] She was succeeded by Will Weng, who was succeeded by Eugene T. Maleska. Since 1993, they have been edited by Will Shortz, the Times' fourth crossword editor.

Simon & Schuster continues to publish the Crossword Puzzle Book Series books that it began in 1924, currently under the editorship of John M. Samson. The original series ended in 2007 after 258 volumes. Since 2008, these books are now in the Mega series, appearing three times per year and each featuring 300 puzzles.

The cryptic crossword variation originated in Britain in the mid-1920s. Edward Powys Mathers set the first crossword to use entirely cryptic clues, originally just for the enjoyment of his friends, one of whom, without permission, submitted it to the Saturday Westminster Gazette. The editors approached Mathers for more puzzles, and published eleven more of these novel cryptic crosswords. Upon the demise of the Saturday Westminster, Mathers began setting puzzles for The Observer, beginning a series of 670 cryptic crosswords, which ended only with Mathers' death in 1939.[42] Mathers set his puzzles under the pen name of Torquemada, after the first Grand Inquisitor of the Spanish Inquisition. His successors as The Observer cryptic crossword setter followed his example. Derrick Somerset Macnutt, who took over at Mather's death, chose the pen name "Ximenes," an Anglicization of the surname of Francisco Jiménez de Cisneros, a Grand Inquisitor in Castile. The current Observer cryptic compiler, Jonathan Crowther sets under the name "Azed," a reversal of Deva, another Grand Inquisitor. Cryptic crosswords are popular in Britain, some British Commonwealth nations, and in a few other countries. Many British newspapers publish both standard and cryptic crosswords.

The cryptic crossword was imported to the US in 1968 by composer and lyricist Stephen Sondheim in the New York magazine, but never became widespread. From 1977 to 2006, The Atlantic regularly featured a cryptic crossword "Puzzler" by the husband and wife team of Emily Cox and Henry Rathvon. From 2006 to 2009, The Atlantic puzzler appeared only online. In 2010, Cox and Rathvon's efforts began to appear monthly in The Wall Street Journal.[43] The pair retired at the end of 2023, but the WSJ continues to offer a cryptic crossword each month.

In the United Kingdom, the Sunday Express was the first newspaper to publish a crossword on November 2, 1924, a Wynne puzzle adapted for the UK. The first crossword in Britain, according to Tony Augarde in his Oxford Guide to Word Games (1984), was in Pearson's Magazine for February 1922.

 
Finalists competing in a crossword competition in New York City in 2019

The 2006 documentary Wordplay, about enthusiasts of The New York Times's puzzle, increased public interest in crosswords. It highlighted attendees of Will Shortz's American Crossword Puzzle Tournament and other notable crossword enthusiasts, including former US president Bill Clinton and comedian Jon Stewart.[26]

World War II edit

In 1944, Allied security officers were disturbed by the appearance, in a series of crosswords in The Daily Telegraph, of words that were secret code names for military operations planned as part of Operation Overlord.

Some cryptologists for Bletchley Park were selected after doing well in a crossword-solving competition.[44]

Records edit

According to Guinness World Records, May 15, 2007, the most prolific crossword compiler is Roger Squires of Ironbridge, Shropshire, UK. On May 14, 2007, he published his 66,666th crossword,[45] equivalent to 2 million clues. He is one of only four setters to have provided cryptic puzzles to The Times, The Daily Telegraph, The Guardian, the Financial Times and The Independent. He also holds the record for the longest word ever used in a published crossword—the 58-letter Welsh town Llanfairpwllgwyngyllgogerychwyrndrobwllllantysiliogogogoch clued as an anagram.

Enthusiasts have compiled a number of record-setting achievements in New York Times and other venues.[46]

  • The lowest word count in a published weekday-size 15x15 puzzle is the June 29, 2013 The New York Times crossword by Joe Krozel, with just 50 words.[47]
  • The fewest shaded squares in a 15x15 American crossword is 17 (leaving 208 white spaces), set by the July 27, 2012 Times crossword by Joe Krozel.[48]
  • The record for most crosswords published in The New York Times is held by Manny Nosowsky, who has had 241 puzzles in that outlet.
  • A N Prahlada Rao, crossword constructor from India, has recorded in the Limca Book of Records in 2016 for constructing highest number of crosswords in Indian regional languages. In 2019 his name has mentioned in the Kalam Book of World Records.[49][50]

Female crossword constructors edit

Women editors such as Margaret Farrar were influential in the first few decades of puzzle-making, and women constructors such as Bernice Gordon and Elizabeth Gorski have each contributed hundreds of puzzles to The New York Times.[51] However, in recent years the number of women constructors has declined. During the years that Will Weng and Eugene Maleska edited the New York Times crossword (1969–1993), women constructors accounted for 35% of puzzles,[52][53] while during the editorship of Will Shortz (1993–present), this percentage has gone down, with women constructors (including collaborations) accounting for only 15% of puzzles in both 2014 and 2015, 17% of puzzles published in 2016, 13%—the lowest in the "Shortz Era"—in 2017, and 16% in 2018.[54][55] Several reasons have been given for the decline in women constructors. One explanation is that the gender imbalance in crossword construction is similar to that in related fields, such as journalism, and that more freelance male constructors than females submit puzzles on spec to The New York Times and other outlets.[56] Another explanation is that computer-assisted construction and the increased influence of computational approaches in generating word lists may be making crossword construction more like STEM fields in which women are underrepresented for a number of factors.[52] However, it has also been argued that this explanation risks propagating myths about gender and technology.[57] Some have argued that the relative absence of women constructors and editors has had an influence on the content of the puzzles themselves, and that clues and entries can be insensitive regarding language related to gender and race.[58][59] Margaret Irvine suggested that lack of confidence was a barrier.[60] Several approaches have been suggested to develop more women in the field, including mentoring novice women constructors and encouraging women constructors to publish their puzzles independently.[61][57]

Crossword venues other than New York Times have recently published higher percentages of women than that puzzle. In the spring of 2018, Patti Varol and Amy Reynaldo organized and edited a pack of 18 puzzles constructed by women called "Women of Letters".[62] Inspired by this, Laura Braunstein and Tracy Bennett launched The Inkubator, a "twice-monthly subscription service that will publish crosswords constructed by cis women, trans women, and woman-aligned constructors."[63] The Inkubator raised over $30,000 in its initial Kickstarter campaign,[64] and began publishing puzzles on January 17, 2019. A book of 100 puzzles, Inkubator Crosswords: 100 Audacious Puzzles by Women and Nonbinary Creators, was published in 2022.[65] On February 8, 2023, they announced to subscribers that 2023 would be their final year as a subscription service.[66]

Non-English languages edit

Owing to the large number of words ending with a vowel, Italian crossword-makers have perhaps the most difficult task. The right margin and the bottom can be particularly difficult to put together. From such a perspective, Swedish crossword-makers have a far easier task. Especially in the large picture crosswords, both conjugation of verbs and declension of adjectives and nouns are allowed. A Swedish clue like "kan sättas i munnen" = "sked" ("can be put in the mouth" = "spoon") can be grammatically changed; "den kan sättas i munnen" = "skeden" ("it can be put in the mouth" = "the spoon"), as the definite form of a noun includes declension.

Orthography edit

From their origin in New York, crosswords have spread to many countries and languages. In languages other than English, the status of diacritics varies according to the orthography of the particular language, thus:

  • in Afrikaans all diacritical markings are ignored. Words such as TEË (meaning opposed) and TEE (meaning tea) are both simply written TEE. The same goes for (say) and SE (belonging to) and many others.
  • in Czech and Slovak, diacritics are respected and ch, being considered one letter, occupies one square.
  • in Dutch crosswords, the ij digraph is considered one letter, filling one square, and the IJ and the Y (see Dutch alphabet) are considered distinct. Rules may vary in other word games.
  • in Esperanto crosswords, diacritics are respected, as they form separate letters (graphemes).[67]
  • in French, in Spanish and in Italian, accent marks and most other diacritical markings are ignored, except the tilde in Spanish: for instance, in French, the final E of answer ÊTRE can double as the final É of CONGÉ when written ETRE and CONGE; but in Spanish, N and Ñ are distinct letters.
  • In Frisian diacritics are fully respected.
  • in German language crosswords, the umlauts ä, ö, and ü are dissolved into ae, oe, and ue, and ß is dissolved into ss.
  • in Hungarian, diacritics are either fully respected, or not respected where they denote length: that is I/Í, O/Ó, Ö/Ő, U/Ú, Ü/Ű are considered the same, but not A/Á and E/É which mark different sounds; although the difference between the short/long pairs of letters is a distinctive feature in Hungarian. Digraphs fill two squares.
  • in Irish crosswords, the accents on Á É Í Ó Ú are all respected, so (for example) the Í in SÍB cannot double as the I in SLIABH.
  • in Latin, diacritics are ignored. Therefore, A is considered the same as Ă or Ā. Ecclesiastical Latin is normally used. See the monthly magazine of Latin crosswords Hebdomada Aenigmatum as a reference.[68]
  • in Portuguese, diacritics are ignored with the exception of Ç. Therefore, A could be checked with à or Á.
  • in Romanian, diacritics are ignored.
  • in Russian, Ё doubles as Е but Й is considered different from И; the soft sign Ь and the hard sign Ъ occupy a separate square, different from that of the previous letter.
  • in Spanish crosswords, the digraphs ch and ll fill two squares, although in some old crosswords (from prior to the 1996 spelling reform) they filled one square.

Grid design, clues, and conventions edit

French-language crosswords are smaller than English-language ones, and not necessarily square: there are usually 8–13 rows and columns, totaling 81–130 squares. They need not be symmetric and two-letter words are allowed, unlike in most English-language puzzles. Compilers strive to minimize use of shaded squares. A black-square usage of 10% is typical; Georges Perec compiled many 9×9 grids for Le Point with four or even three black squares.[69] Rather than numbering the individual clues, the rows and columns are numbered as on a chessboard. All clues for a given row or column are listed, against its number, as separate sentences.

In Italy, crosswords are usually oblong and larger than French ones, 13×21 being a common size. As in France, they usually are not symmetrical; two-letter words are allowed; and the number of shaded squares is minimized. Nouns (including surnames) and the infinitive or past participle of verbs are allowed, as are abbreviations; in larger crosswords, it is customary to put at the center of the grid phrases made of two to four words, or forenames and surnames. A variant of Italian crosswords does not use shaded squares: words are delimited by thickening the grid. Another variant starts with a blank grid: the solver must insert both the answers and the shaded squares, and across and down clues are either ordered by row and column or not ordered at all.

Modern Hebrew is normally written with only the consonants; vowels are either understood, or entered as diacritical marks. This can lead to ambiguities in the entry of some words, and compilers generally specify that answers are to be entered in ktiv male (with some vowels) or ktiv haser (without vowels). Further, since Hebrew is written from right to left, but Roman numerals are used and written from left to right, there can be an ambiguity in the description of lengths of entries, particularly for multi-word phrases. Different compilers and publications use differing conventions for both of these issues.

In the Japanese language crossword; because of the writing system, one syllable (typically katakana) is entered into each white cell of the grid rather than one letter, resulting in the typical solving grid seeming small in comparison to those of other languages. Any second Yōon character is treated as a full syllable and is rarely written with a smaller character. Even cipher crosswords have a Japanese equivalent, although pangrammaticity does not apply. Crosswords with kanji to fill in are also produced, but in far smaller number as it takes far more effort to construct one. Despite Japanese having three writing forms - hiragana, katakana, and kanji - they are rarely mixed in a single crossword puzzle. The design of Japanese crossword grids often follows two additional rules: that shaded cells may not share a side (i.e. they may not be orthogonally contiguous) and that the corner squares must be white.

A. N. Prahlada Rao, based in Bangalore, has composed/ constructed some 35,000 crossword puzzles in the language Kannada, including 7,500 crosswords based on films made in Kannada, with a total of 10,00,000 (ten lakhs, or one million) clues.[70][71] His name was recorded in the Limca Book Of Records in 2015 for creating the highest number of crosswords in any Indian Regional Language. He continued to hold this title through 2016 and 2017.[72] In 2008, a five volume set of his puzzles was released, followed by 7 more volumes in 2017.[73] Bengali is also well known for its crossword puzzles. Crosswords are published regularly in most Bengali dailies and periodicals. The grid system is similar to the British style and two-letter words are usually not allowed.

In Poland, crosswords typically use British-style grids, but some do not have shaded cells. Shaded cells are often replaced by boxes with clues—such crosswords are called Swedish puzzles or Swedish-style crosswords. In a vast majority of Polish crosswords, nouns are the only allowed words.

Swedish crosswords are mainly in the illustrated (photos or drawings), in-line clue style typical of the "Swedish-style grid". The "Swedish-style" grid (picture crosswords) uses no clue numbers. Instead, clues are contained in the cells which do not contain answers, with arrows indicating where and in what direction to fill in answers. Arrows can be omitted from clue cells, in which case the convention is for the answer to go horizontally to the right of the clue cell, or – if the clue cell is split vertically and contains two clues – for the answer to go horizontally to the right for the top clue and vertically below for the bottom clue. This style of grid is also used in several countries other than Sweden, often in magazines, but also in daily newspapers. The grid often has one or more photos replacing a block of squares as a clue to one or several answers; for example, the name of a pop star, or some kind of rhyme or phrase that can be associated with the photo. These puzzles usually have no symmetry in the grid but instead often have a common theme (literature, music, nature, geography, events of a special year, etc.) This tradition prospered already in the mid-1900s, in family magazines and sections of newspapers. Then the specialised magazines took off. Around the turn of the millennium, approximately half a dozen Swedish magazine publishers produced specialised crossword magazines, totaling more than twenty titles, often published on a monthly basis. The oldest extant crossword magazine published in Swedish is Krysset[74] (from Bonnier), founded in 1957. Additionally, nearly all newspapers publish crosswords of some kind, and at weekends often devote specialised sections in the paper to crosswords and similar type of pastime material. Both major evening dailies (Aftonbladet and Expressen) publish a weekly crossword supplement, named Kryss & Quiz and Korsord[75] respectively. Both are available as paid supplements on Mondays and Tuesdays, as part of the ongoing competition between the two newspapers.

Construction edit

American-style crosswords edit

In typical themed American-style crosswords, the theme is created first, as a set of symmetric long across answers will be needed around which the grid can be created.[76][77] Since the grid will typically have 180-degree rotational symmetry, the answers will need to be also: thus a typical 15×15 square American puzzle might have two 15-letter entries and two 13-letter entries that could be arranged appropriately in the grid (e.g., one 15-letter entry in the third row, and the other symmetrically in the 13th row; one 13-letter entry starting in the first square of the 6th row and the other ending in the last square of the 10th row).[77][78] The theme must not only be funny or interesting, but also internally consistent. In the April 26, 2005 by Sarah Keller mentioned above, the five themed entries contained in the different parts of a tree: SQUAREROOT, TABLELEAF, WARDROBETRUNK, BRAINSTEM, and BANKBRANCH. In this puzzle, CHARTER OAK would not be an appropriate entry, as all the other entries contain different parts of a tree, not the name of a kind of tree. Similarly, FAMILY TREE would not be appropriate unless it were used as a revealer for the theme (frequently clued with a phrase along the lines "... and a hint to ..."). Given the existing entries, SEED MONEY would also be unacceptable, as all the other theme entries end in the part of a tree as opposed to beginning with it, though the puzzle could certainly be changed to have a mix of words in different positions.[76]

Once a consistent, appropriate theme has been chosen, a grid is designed around that theme, following a set of basic principles:

  • Generally, most American puzzles are 15×15 squares; if another size, they typically have an odd number of rows and columns: e.g., 21×21 for "Sunday-size" puzzles; Games magazine will accept 17×17 puzzles, Simon & Schuster accepts both 17×17 and 19×19 puzzles, and The New York Times requires diagramless puzzles to be 17×17.[79] The odd number of squares on a side ensures that achieving symmetry is easier; with even-numbered puzzles the central block of four squares makes constructing a symmetrical puzzle considerably more difficult.[80]
  • The black squares must be arranged so as to (1) ensure there are no two-letter words; (2) form 180-degree rotational symmetry (so that if the grid is turned upside-down, the pattern of black squares remains the same); (3) ensure that every letter is checked (appears in both an across and a down word); (4) not occupy too much of the puzzle (generally speaking, 16% of the puzzle is considered a rough limit for the percentage of black squares); (5) ensure that the entire puzzle has "all-over interlock"—that is, that the black squares do not "cut" the puzzle into separate sections; and (6) ensure that (generally) no non-theme entry is longer than any of the theme entries. In addition, it is considered advisable to minimize the number of so-called "cheater" black squares, i.e., black squares whose removal would not change the word count of the puzzle but which make it easier to fill by shortening the length of the words therein.[77][78][81]
  • The grid is then filled with suitable words, keeping in mind that (1) no word can be repeated in the grid (with the exception of prepositions or articles); (2) profanity or graphic or "unpleasant" words are generally not allowed; (3) obscurity is strongly discouraged in easy puzzles and should be kept to a minimum in more difficult puzzles, where two obscure words should never be allowed to cross (and, ideally, where the obscure word would be of interest to most solvers—a genus of little-known water bugs would not be a good choice); (4) uncommon abbreviations and variant foreign spellings should be avoided, as well as the use of crosswordese (those words that no longer appear in common speech but that occur frequently in crosswords due to their favorable letter combinations, such as the Asian buffalo ANOA); (5) in modern puzzles, pop figures and corporate and brand names are generally considered acceptable; (6) no made-up words are permitted—there should be a dictionary or other reference that can cite each entry if asked.[77][81]
  • Modern constructors frequently (although not always) use software to speed up the task. Several programs are available, of which the most widely accepted is Crossword Compiler.[76] These programs, although they cannot create themes and cannot distinguish between "good" fill (fun, interesting words vs. dull obscurity), do speed up the process and will allow the constructor to realize if they have hit a dead end.[82]

Crossword puzzle payments for standard 15×15 puzzles from the major outlets range from $50 (Games) to $500 (The New York Times) while payments for 21×21 puzzles range from $250 (Newsday) to $1,500 (The New York Times).[83]

The compensation structure of crosswords generally entails authors selling all rights to their puzzles upon publication, and as a result receiving no royalties from republication of their work in books or other forms.

Software edit

Software that aids in creating crossword puzzles has been written since at least 1976;[84] one popular example was Crossword Magic for the Apple II in the 1980s.[85] The earliest software relied on people to input a list of fill words and clues, and automatically maps the answers onto a suitable grid. This is a search problem in computer science because there are many possible arrangements to be checked against the rules of construction. Any given set of answers might have zero, one, or multiple legal arrangements. Modern open source libraries exist that attempt to efficiently generate legal arrangements from a given set of answers.[86]

In the late 1990s, the transition began from mostly hand-created arrangements to computer-assisted, which creators generally say has allowed authors to produce more interesting and creative puzzles, reducing crosswordese.[87]

Modern software includes large databases of clues and answers, allowing the computer to randomly select words for the puzzle, potentially with guidance from the user as to the theme or a specific set of words to pick with greater probability. Many serious users add words to the database as an expression of personal creativity or for use in a desired theme. Software can also be used to assist the user in finding words for a specific spot in an arrangement by quickly searching through the dictionary for all words that fit.[87]

In 1998 in Jakarta, publisher Elex Media Komputindo (Gramedia Group) published a crossword software entitled "Teka-Teki Silang Komputer" (Computerized Crossword Puzzle [Eng]) in diskette form. It is the first Crossword Puzzle software published in Indonesia. Created by Sukmono Bayu Adhi, the software is archived in the National Library of the Republic of Indonesia (Salemba Library, Jakarta).[88]

Notation edit

Originally Petherbridge called the two dimensions of the crossword puzzle "Horizontal" and "Vertical". Among various numbering schemes, the standard became that in which only the start squares of each word were numbered, from left to right and top to bottom. "1 Horizontal" and "1 Vertical" and the like were names for the clues, the cross words, or the grid locations, interchangeably.

Later in the Times these terms commonly became "across" and "down" and notations for clues could either use the words or the letters "A" and "D", with or without hyphens.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Shortz, Will (April 8, 2001). "Endpaper: How to; Solve The New York Times Crossword Puzzle". The New York Times.
  2. ^ "American-style crosswords". Theguardian.
  3. ^ Berry, Patrick (2015). Crossword Constructor's Handbook. pp. 62–80.
  4. ^ D. S. MacNutt with A. Robins, Ximenes on the art of the crossword, Methuen & Co Ltd, London (1966) p. 49.
  5. ^ "How to Make a Crossword Puzzle". crosswordhobbyist.com.
  6. ^ a b c d e f "Identified theme. types". Cruciverb.com. Retrieved 5 March 2013.
  7. ^ Der, Kevin G. "New York Times crossword of October 7, 2011". XWordInfo.com. Retrieved 5 March 2013.
  8. ^ Gaffney, Matt. "Matt Gaffney's Weekly Crossword Contest Frequently Asked Questions". Retrieved 30 September 2015.
  9. ^ Gaffney, Matt (14 August 2015). "Eight Isn't Enough". Retrieved 30 September 2015.
  10. ^ Gaffney, Matt. "Contest Crosswords 101". The Wall Street Journal. Dow Jones & Company, Inc. Retrieved 18 Feb 2024.
  11. ^ PastWSJCCsolutions. "Past WSJ Crossword Contests & Solutions". XWord Muggles Forum. Retrieved 18 Feb 2024.
  12. ^ Pahk, Joon (2012-05-09). "Comment, Thursday, May 9, 2012". Diary of a Crossword Fiend. Retrieved 2019-11-25.
  13. ^ "Quantum". xwordinfo.com.
  14. ^ Farrell, Jeremiah. "New York Times puzzle of Tuesday, November 5, 1996". xwordinfo.com. Retrieved 16 January 2017.
  15. ^ Amende, Coral (2001). The Crossword Obsession. New York: Berkley Books. ISBN 978-0756790868.
  16. ^ Tausig, Ben. "New York Times puzzle of Thursday, September 1, 2016". xwordinfo.com. Retrieved 16 January 2017.
  17. ^ Roeder, Oliver (September 2016). "One of the Most Important Crosswords in New York Times History". Slate. Retrieved 16 January 2017.
  18. ^ "Cryptic crosswords: A puzzling British obsession". www.bbc.com. Retrieved 2021-10-31.
  19. ^ a b Hardcastle, D. (n.d.). Cryptic crossword clues: Generating text with hidden meaning.
  20. ^ Poole, David L.; Mackworth, Alan K. (2010). Artificial Intelligence: Foundations of Computational Agents. New York: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-51900-7.
  21. ^ "Arroword". puzzler.com. Retrieved May 17, 2011.
  22. ^ "St. Nicholas. September 1875, page 66". Childrenslibrary.org. Retrieved 2013-11-26.
  23. ^ "Storia delle parole crociate e del cruciverba" (in Italian). Crucienigmi. Retrieved August 28, 2009.
  24. ^ . Massachusetts Institute of Technology. August 1997. Archived from the original on 2003-03-02. Retrieved 2010-12-18.
  25. ^ Bellis, Mary. "The History of Crossword Puzzles". About.com. Archived from the original on July 17, 2012. Retrieved 2010-12-18.
  26. ^ a b c d Amlen, Deb. "How the Crossword Became an American Pastime". Smithsonian. Retrieved 2020-01-06.
  27. ^ "Cross-Word Puzzle". The Pittsburgh Press. June 11, 1916. Comic section's fifth page.
  28. ^ The Boston Globe, April 8, 1917, p. 43 contains a puzzle and a solution to a previous week's puzzle.
  29. ^ "Movie of a Man Doing the Cross-Word Puzzle", by "Briggs", Morning Oregonian, October 3, 1922, p. 14; also published in several other newspapers.
  30. ^ "There Goes My Crossword Puzzle, Get Up Please". The Boston Daily Globe, October 1, 1923, p. 7.
  31. ^ "Jottings About Town". The New Yorker, February 21, 1925, p. 30.
  32. ^ Report of the New York Public Library for 1924; published by The Library, 1925
  33. ^ Frederick Lewis Allen (1931). Only Yesterday. Harper and Row., p. 159 of 1964 Perennial Library paperback reprint
  34. ^ "Best crossword puzzles Writers". Sunday, 22 August 2021
  35. ^ "Topics of the Times". The New York Times, November 17, 1924, p. 18
  36. ^ "Condemns Cross-Word Fad". The New York Times, December 23, 1924, p. 17
  37. ^ . Time. January 5, 1925. Archived from the original on January 22, 2009. Retrieved 2008-08-05.
  38. ^ Topics of the Times: Sees Harm, Not Education" The New York Times, March 10, 1925, p. 20,
  39. ^ "All About the Insidious Game of Anagrams", The New York Times, December 29, 1929, p. BR3
  40. ^ Richard H. (1930), "The Lure of the Puzzle". The New York Times, February 4, 1930, p. 20
  41. ^ "crossword". OED Online. March 2017. Oxford University Press. (accessed April 28, 2017).
  42. ^ Millington, Roger. "The Strange World of the Crossword (excerpt)". Retrieved 18 Feb 2024.
  43. ^ Cox, Emily; Rathvon, Henry. "Cryptic Puzzles by Emily Cox & Henry Rathvon". Cox Rathvon (Hex). Retrieved 17 Feb 2024.
  44. ^ The Daily Telegraph – 80 Years of Cryptic Crosswords, p. 44.
  45. ^ (Pat-Ella) , Richard Savill, The Daily Telegraph, May 15, 2007
  46. ^ . Archived from the original on 2020-01-01. Retrieved 2020-04-14.
  47. ^ "New York Times, Saturday, June 29, 2013". Xwordinfo.com. Retrieved 2022-04-29.
  48. ^ "Friday, July 27, 2012 crossword by Joe Krozel". Xwordinfo.com. 2012-07-27. Retrieved 2013-11-26.
  49. ^ "Most Crosswords Created (Regional Language)". The Coca-Cola Company. Retrieved 2021-06-28.
  50. ^ "World Records 2019 | Kalams World Records".
  51. ^ "Elizabeth C. Gorski". xwordinfo.com. Retrieved 17 January 2017.
  52. ^ a b Shechtman, Anna (2014). "Puzzle Trouble: Women and Crosswords in the Age of Autofill". The American Reader. Retrieved 17 January 2017.
  53. ^ Steinberg, David. "The Pre-Shortzian Puzzle Project". Retrieved 17 January 2014.
  54. ^ "Women constructors in the Shortz Era". xwordinfo.com. Retrieved 17 January 2017.
  55. ^ Kosman, Joshua; Picciotto, Henry (2014). . thenation.com. Archived from the original on 2 February 2017. Retrieved 18 January 2017.
  56. ^ Tausig, Ben (21 August 2013). . The Hairpin. Archived from the original on 22 April 2017. Retrieved 17 January 2017.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: unfit URL (link)
  57. ^ a b "Elizabeth Gorski: New York Times Crossword Creator". Ravishly.com. 2014. Retrieved 17 January 2017.
  58. ^ Graham, Ruth (2016). "Why Is the New York Times Crossword So Clueless About Race and Gender?". Slate.com. Retrieved 17 January 2017.
  59. ^ Jeffries, Adrianne (2017). "The NYT Crossword Is Old and Kind Of Racist". The Outline. Retrieved 14 June 2017.
  60. ^ Alan Connor (10 April 2017). "Crossword blog: meet the setter – Nutmeg". The Guardian. Retrieved 18 July 2023.
  61. ^ Reynaldo, Amy (2014). "Women and Crossword Construction, Part 1: Why the underrepresentation?". Diary of a Crossword Fiend. Retrieved 17 January 2017.
  62. ^ "Women of Letters". Patti Varol.
  63. ^ Gavin, Hailey. "The Inkubator Is on a Mission to Publish More Female Crossword Puzzle Constructors". Slate.com. Slate. Retrieved 16 January 2019.
  64. ^ "The Inkubator – Kickstarter". Retrieved 16 January 2019.
  65. ^ "Inkubator Crosswords". Andrews McMeel Publishing. Retrieved 2023-03-25.
  66. ^ "the following announcement recently went to our subscribers: After much careful thought, the Inkubator team has made the decision that 2023 will be our last year as a subscription service +". Twitter. Retrieved 2023-03-25.
  67. ^ . www.semajnodeenigmoj.com. Archived from the original on 20 April 2022. Retrieved 25 March 2018.
  68. ^ "Latin crosswords – Cruciverba in latino – Aenigmata latina". Latincrosswords.com.
  69. ^ . Homepage.urbanet.ch. Archived from the original on 2014-04-24. Retrieved 2013-11-26.
  70. ^ "Making clues". Thehindubusinessline.in. 2001-05-14. Retrieved 2013-11-26.
  71. ^ "Details". www.vijaykarnatakaepaper.com.
  72. ^ "Limca Book of Records". www.limcabookofrecords.in.
  73. ^ . The Hindu. 2008-02-17. Archived from the original on 2009-07-24. Retrieved 2013-11-26.
  74. ^ "Krysset – klassikern med kvalitet och kunskap". Krysset.se. Retrieved 2012-01-04. (in Swedish)
  75. ^ "Dagens bilaga med Expressen – Korsord". Expressen.se. Retrieved 2012-01-04. (in Swedish)
  76. ^ a b c Salomon, Nancy. "Notes from a Mentor". cruciverb.com. Retrieved 25 February 2013.
  77. ^ a b c d Rosen, Mel (1995). Random House Puzzlemaker's Handbook. New York: Random House. ISBN 9780812925449.
  78. ^ a b Kurzban, Stanley A. (1981). The Compleat Cruciverbalist: Or How to Solve and Compose Crossword Puzzles for Fun and Profit. Van Nostrand Reinhold. ISBN 978-0442257385.
  79. ^ "Publisher Specifications". cruciverb.com. Retrieved 25 February 2013.
  80. ^ Gore, Molly (15 November 2007). "Math professor and crossword constructor gives puzzle advice". The Santa Clara. Santa Clara, California. Retrieved 25 February 2013.
  81. ^ a b "Basic Rules". cruciverb.com. Retrieved 25 February 2013.
  82. ^ Holmes, Kristin E. (29 April 2007). . The Philadelphia Inquirer (archived at crosswordtournament.com). Archived from the original on 20 April 2013. Retrieved 25 February 2013.
  83. ^ "Publisher chart". cruciverb.com. Retrieved 25 February 2013.
  84. ^ ""Dr.Fill" Vies for Crossword Solving Supremacy". 19 Sep 2014.
  85. ^ "1980–84 Misc". 9 July 2010.
  86. ^ . 17 November 2019. Archived from the original on 17 November 2019. Retrieved 17 November 2019.
  87. ^ a b Julie Leibach (19 September 2014). "Inside the Box: Crossword Puzzle Constructing in the Computer Age".
  88. ^ The catalog can be accessed online at http://opac.perpusnas.go.id/DetailOpac.aspx?id=62691

Further reading edit

External links edit

  Media related to Crosswords at Wikimedia Commons

crossword, other, uses, disambiguation, this, article, multiple, issues, please, help, improve, discuss, these, issues, talk, page, learn, when, remove, these, template, messages, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve. For other uses see Crossword disambiguation This article has multiple issues Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page Learn how and when to remove these template messages This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Crossword news newspapers books scholar JSTOR November 2020 Learn how and when to remove this message This article s lead section may be too short to adequately summarize the key points Please consider expanding the lead to provide an accessible overview of all important aspects of the article July 2023 Learn how and when to remove this message A crossword or crossword puzzle is a word game consisting of a grid of black and white squares into which solvers enter words or phrases entries crossing each other horizontally across and vertically down according to a set of clues Each white square is typically filled with one letter while the black squares are used to separate entries The first white square in each entry is typically numbered to correspond to its clue An American style crossword grid layout Crosswords commonly appear in newspapers and magazines The earliest crosswords that resemble their modern form were popularized by the New York World in the 1910s Many variants of crosswords are popular around the world including cryptic crosswords and many language specific variants Contents 1 American style crosswords 1 1 Clues conventions and types 1 1 1 Capitalization 1 1 2 Abbreviations 1 1 3 Themes 1 1 4 Indirect clues 1 1 5 Other clue variations 1 2 Metapuzzles 1 3 Schrodinger or quantum puzzles 2 Cryptic crosswords 2 1 Types of cryptic clues 3 Other variants 3 1 Cipher crosswords 3 2 Diagramless crosswords 3 3 Fill in crosswords 3 4 Cross figures 3 5 Acrostic puzzles 3 6 Arroword 4 History 4 1 World War II 4 2 Records 4 3 Female crossword constructors 5 Non English languages 5 1 Orthography 5 2 Grid design clues and conventions 6 Construction 6 1 American style crosswords 7 Software 8 Notation 9 See also 10 References 11 Further reading 12 External linksAmerican style crosswords editThis section relies largely or entirely on a single source Relevant discussion may be found on the talk page Please help improve this article by introducing citations to additional sources Find sources Crossword news newspapers books scholar JSTOR March 2018 nbsp A person works on a crossword puzzle in the New York City Subway 2008 Crossword grids such as those appearing in most North American newspapers and magazines consist mainly of solid regions of uninterrupted white squares separated more sparsely by shaded squares Every letter is checked i e is part of both an across word and a down word and usually each answer must contain at least three letters In such puzzles shaded squares are typically limited to about one sixth of the total Crossword grids elsewhere such as in Britain South Africa India and Australia have a lattice like structure with a higher percentage of shaded squares around 25 leaving about half the letters in an answer unchecked For example if the top row has an answer running all the way across there will often be no across answers in the second row Another tradition in puzzle design in North America India and Britain particularly is that the grid should have 180 degree rotational symmetry so that its pattern appears the same if the paper is turned upside down Most puzzle designs also require that all white cells be orthogonally contiguous that is connected in one mass through shared sides to form a single polyomino Substantial variants from the usual forms exist Two of the common ones are barred crosswords which use bold lines between squares instead of shaded squares to separate answers and circular designs with answers entered either radially or in concentric circles Free form crosswords criss cross puzzles which have simple asymmetric designs are often seen on school worksheets children s menus and other entertainment for children Grids forming shapes other than squares are also occasionally used Puzzles are often one of several standard sizes For example many weekday newspaper puzzles such as the American New York Times crossword puzzle are 15 15 squares while weekend puzzles may be 21 21 23 23 or 25 25 The New York Times puzzles also set a common pattern for American crosswords by increasing in difficulty throughout the week their Monday puzzles are the easiest and the puzzles get harder each day until Saturday Their larger Sunday puzzle is about the same level of difficulty as a weekday size Thursday puzzle 1 This has led U S solvers to use the day of the week as a shorthand when describing how hard a puzzle is e g an easy puzzle may be referred to as a Monday or a Tuesday a medium difficulty puzzle as a Wednesday and a truly difficult puzzle as a Saturday Typically clues appear outside the grid divided into an across list and a down list the first cell of each entry contains a number referenced by the clue lists For example the answer to a clue labeled 17 Down is entered with the first letter in the cell numbered 17 proceeding down from there Numbers are almost never repeated numbered cells are numbered consecutively usually from left to right across each row starting with the top row and proceeding downward Some Japanese crosswords are numbered from top to bottom down each column starting with the leftmost column and proceeding right Clues conventions and types edit American style crossword clues called straight or quick clues by those more familiar with cryptic puzzles are often simple definitions of the answers Often a straight clue is not in itself sufficient to distinguish between several possible answers either because multiple synonymous answers may fit or because the clue itself is a homonym e g Lead as in to be ahead in a contest or Lead as in the element so the solver must make use of checks to establish the correct answer with certainty For example the answer to the clue PC key for a three letter answer could be ESC ALT TAB DEL or INS so until a check is filled in giving at least one of the letters the correct answer cannot be determined In most American style crosswords 2 the majority of the clues in the puzzle are straight clues 3 with the remainder being one of the other types described below Crossword clues are generally consistent with the solutions For instance clues and their solutions should always agree in tense number and degree 4 If a clue is in the past tense so is the answer thus Traveled on horseback would be a valid clue for the solution RODE but not for RIDE Similarly Family members would be a valid clue for AUNTS but not UNCLE while More joyful could clue HAPPIER but not HAPPIEST Capitalization edit This section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed November 2020 Learn how and when to remove this message Capitalization of answer letters is conventionally ignored crossword puzzles are typically filled in and their answer sheets published in all caps This ensures a proper name can have its initial capital letter checked with a non capitalizable letter in the intersecting clue Some clue examples Fill in the blank clues are often the easiest in a puzzle and a good place to start solving e g Boleyn ANNE A question mark at the end of clue usually signals that the clue answer combination involves some sort of pun or wordplay e g Grateful ASHES since a grate might be full of them Most widely distributed American crosswords today e g The New York Times The Washington Post The Boston Globe USA Today etc also contain colloquial answers i e entries in the puzzle grid that try to replicate everyday colloquial language In such a puzzle one might see phrases such as WHAT S UP AS IF or WHADDYA WANT Abbreviations edit Main article Crossword abbreviations The constraints of the American style grid in which every letter is checked often require a fair number of answers not to be dictionary words As a result the following ways to clue abbreviations and other non words although they can be found in straight British crosswords are much more common in American ones Abbreviations the use of a foreign language variant spellings or other unusual word tricks are indicated in the clue A crossword creator might choose to clue the answer SEN as in the abbreviation for senator as Washington bigwig Abbr or Member of Cong with the abbreviation in the clue indicating that the answer is to be similarly abbreviated 5 The use of Var indicates the answer is a variant spelling e g EMEER instead of EMIR while the use of foreign language or a foreign place name within the clue indicates that the answer is also in a foreign language For example ETE ete French for summer might be clued as Summer in the Sorbonne ROMA could be clued as Italia s capital whereas the clue Italy s capital would indicate the English spelling Rome The eight possible abbreviations for a position on a compass e g NNW north northwest or ESE east southeast occur with some frequency They can be clued as simply Compass point where the desired answer is determined by a combination of logic since the third letter can be only E or W and the second letter can be only N or S and a process of elimination using checks Alternatively compass point answers are more frequently clued as XXX to YYY direction where XXX and YYY are two place names For example SSW might be clued as New York to Washington DC dir Similarly a clue such as Right on the map means EAST A clue could also consist of objects that point a direction e g vane dir or windsock dir Roman numerals and arithmetic involving them frequently appear as well the clue IV times III 4 3 would yield XII 12 In addition partial answers are allowed in American style crosswords where the answer represents part of a longer phrase For example the clue Mind your Qs gives the answer PSAND Ps and Non dictionary phrases are also allowed in answers Thus the clue Mocked could result in the grid entry LAUGHED AT Themes edit Many American crossword puzzles feature a theme consisting of a number of long entries generally three to five in a standard 15 15 square weekday size puzzle that share some relationship type of pun or other element in common As an example the New York Times crossword of April 26 2005 by Sarah Keller edited by Will Shortz featured five themed entries ending in the different parts of a tree SQUAREROOT TABLELEAF WARDROBETRUNK BRAINSTEM and BANKBRANCH The above is an example of a category theme where the theme elements are all members of the same set Other types of themes include Quote themes featuring a famous quote broken up into parts to fit in the grid and usually clued as Quote part 1 Quote part 2 etc Rebus themes where multiple letters or even symbols occupy a single square in the puzzle e g BERMUDAD Addition themes where theme entries are created by adding a letter letters or word s to an existing word or phrase For example Crucial pool shot CRITICAL MASSE formed by taking the phrase critical mass and adding an e on the end All the theme entries in a given puzzle must be formed by the same process so another entry might be Greco Roman buddy WRESTLING MATE wrestling mat with an e added on An example of a multiple letter addition and one that does not occur at the end of the entry might be Crazy about kitchen storage CABINET FEVER derived from cabin fever 6 Subtraction themes the reverse of the above where letters are removed to make a new word or phrase 6 Compound themes where the starts or ends of the theme entries can all precede or follow another word which is given elsewhere in the puzzle For example a puzzle with theme entries that begin with PAPER BALL and WATER and elsewhere in the puzzle the word BOY clued as Word that can follow the start of theme entries 6 Anniversary or tribute themes commemorating a specific person place or event For example on October 7 2011 The New York Times crossword commemorated the life of Apple CEO Steve Jobs who had died on October 5 Theme entries related to Jobs life included MACINTOSH PIXAR THINK DIFFERENT CREATIVE GENIUS STEVE JOBS and APPLE 6 7 Synonym themes where the theme entries all contain synonyms e g a Los Angeles Times puzzle featuring a set of theme entries that contain the words RAVEN JET EBONY and SABLE all synonyms for black 6 Numerous other types have been identified including spoonerisms poems shifted letters rhyming phrases puns homophones and combinations of two or more of other types of themes 6 The Simon amp Schuster Crossword Puzzle Series has published many unusual themed crosswords Rosetta Stone by Sam Bellotto Jr incorporates a Caesar cipher cryptogram as the theme the key to breaking the cipher is the answer to 1 across Another unusual theme requires the solver to use the answer to a clue as another clue The answer to that clue is the real solution Indirect clues edit This section possibly contains original research Please improve it by verifying the claims made and adding inline citations Statements consisting only of original research should be removed March 2021 Learn how and when to remove this message Many puzzles feature clues involving wordplay which are to be taken metaphorically or in some sense other than their literal meaning requiring some form of lateral thinking Depending on the puzzle creator or the editor this might be represented either with a question mark at the end of the clue or with a modifier such as maybe or perhaps In more difficult puzzles the indicator may be omitted increasing ambiguity between a literal meaning and a wordplay meaning Examples Half a dance could clue CAN half of CANCAN or CHA half of CHACHA If taken literally Start of spring could clue MAR for March but it could also clue ESS the spelled out form of the starting letter S Nice summer clues ETE summer in Nice France ete being French for summer rather than a nice pleasant summer This clue also takes advantage of the fact that in American style crosswords the initial letter of a clue is always capitalized whether or not it is a proper noun In this clue the initial capitalization further obscures whether the clue is referring to nice as in pleasant or Nice as in the French city Pay addition taken literally clues BONUS When taken as an indirect clue however it could also clue OLA the addition of ola to pay results in PAYOLA Other clue variations edit Any type of puzzle may contain cross references where the answer to one clue forms part of another clue in which it is referred to by number and direction E g a puzzle might have 1 across clued as Central character in The Lord of the Rings FRODO with 17 down clued as Precious object for 1 Across RING When an answer is composed of multiple or hyphenated words some crosswords especially in Britain indicate the structure of the answer For example 3 5 after a clue indicates that the answer is composed of a three letter word followed by a five letter word Most American style crosswords do not provide this information Metapuzzles edit Some crossword designers have started including a metapuzzle or meta for short a second puzzle within the completed puzzle 8 After the player has correctly solved the crossword puzzle in the usual fashion the solution forms the basis of a second puzzle The designer usually includes a hint to the metapuzzle For instance the puzzle Eight Isn t Enough by Matt Gaffney gives the clue This week s contest answer is a three word phrase whose second word is or 9 The crossword solution includes the entries BROUGHT TO NAUGHT MIGHT MAKES RIGHT CAUGHT A STRAIGHT and HEIGHT AND WEIGHT which are all three word phrases with two words ending in ght The solution to the meta is a similar phrase in which the middle word is or FIGHT OR FLIGHT Since September 2015 the Wall Street Journal Friday crossword has featured a crossword contest metapuzzle with the prize of a WSJ mug going to a reader randomly chosen from among those submitting the correct answer 10 11 Schrodinger or quantum puzzles editSome puzzle grids contain more than one correct answer for the same set of clues These are called Schrodinger or quantum puzzles alluding to the Schrodinger s Cat thought experiment in quantum physics 12 Schrodinger puzzles have frequently been published in venues including Fireball Crosswords and The American Values Club Crosswords and at least ten have appeared in The New York Times since the late 1980s 13 nbsp Clinton Bob Dole puzzle from 1996The daily New York Times puzzle for November 5 1996 by Jeremiah Farrell had a clue for 39 across that read Lead story in tomorrow s newspaper with 43 Across 14 The answer for 43 across was ELECTED depending on the outcome of that day s Presidential Election the answer for 39 across would have been correct with either CLINTON or BOBDOLE as would each of the corresponding down answers 15 On September 1 2016 the daily New York Times puzzle by Ben Tausig had four squares which led to correct answers reading both across and down if solvers entered either M or F 16 The puzzle s theme GENDERFLUID was revealed at 37 across in the center of the puzzle Having a variable identity as suggested by four squares in this puzzle 17 Cryptic crosswords editThis section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed November 2020 Learn how and when to remove this message Main article Cryptic crossword nbsp A lattice style grid common for cryptic crosswords In cryptic crosswords the clues are puzzles in themselves A typical clue contains both a definition at the beginning or end of the clue and wordplay which provides a way to manufacture the word indicated by the definition and which may not parse logically Cryptics usually give the length of their answers in parentheses after the clue which is especially useful with multi word answers Certain signs indicate different forms of wordplay Solving cryptics is harder to learn than standard crosswords as learning to interpret the different types of cryptic clues can take some practice In Great Britain and throughout much of the Commonwealth cryptics of varying degrees of difficulty are featured in many newspapers The first crosswords with strictly cryptic clues appeared in the 1920s pioneered by Edward Powys Mathers He established the principle of cryptic crossword clues 18 Cryptic crossword clues consist typically of a definition and some type of word play Cryptic crossword clues need to be viewed two ways One is a surface reading and one a hidden meaning 19 The surface reading is the basic reading of the clue to look for key words and how those words are constructed in the clue The second way is the hidden meaning This can be a double definition an anagram homophone or words backwards There are eight main types of clues in cryptic crosswords 19 Types of cryptic clues edit There are several types of wordplay used in cryptics One is straightforward definition substitution using parts of a word For example in one puzzle by Mel Taub the answer IMPORTANT is given the clue To bring worker into the country may prove significant The explanation is that to import means to bring into the country the worker is a worker ant and significant means important Here significant is the straight definition appearing here at the end of the clue to bring worker into the country is the wordplay definition and may prove serves to link the two Note that in a cryptic clue there is almost always only one answer that fits both the definition and the wordplay so that when one sees the answer one knows that it is the right answer although it can sometimes be a challenge to figure out why it is the right answer A good cryptic clue should provide a fair and exact definition of the answer while at the same time being deliberately misleading Another type of wordplay used in cryptics is the use of homophones For example the clue A few we hear add up 3 is the clue for SUM The straight definition is add up meaning totalize The solver must guess that we hear indicates a homophone and so a homophone of a synonym of A few some is the answer Other words relating to sound or hearing can be used to signal the presence of a homophone clue e g aloud audibly in conversation etc The double meaning is commonly used as another form of wordplay For example Cat s tongue 7 is solved by PERSIAN since this is a type of cat as well as a tongue or language This is the only type of cryptic clue without wordplay both parts of the clue are a straight definition Cryptics often include anagrams as well The clue Ned T s seal cooked is rather bland 5 4 is solved by NEEDS SALT The straight definition is is rather bland and the word cooked is a hint to the solver that this clue is an anagram the letters have been cooked or jumbled up Ignoring all punctuation Ned T s seal is an anagram for NEEDS SALT Besides cooked other common hints that the clue contains an anagram are words such as scrambled mixed up confused baked or twisted Embedded words are another common trick in cryptics The clue Bigotry aside I d take him 9 is solved by APARTHEID The straight definition is bigotry and the wordplay explains itself indicated by the word take since one word takes another aside means APART and I d is simply ID so APART and ID take HE which is in cryptic crossword usage a perfectly good synonym for him The answer could be elucidated as APART HE ID Another common clue type is the hidden clue or container where the answer is hidden in the text of the clue itself For example Made a dug out buried and passed away 4 is solved by DEAD The answer is written in the clue maDE A Dug out Buried indicates that the answer is embedded within the clue There are numerous other forms of wordplay found in cryptic clues Backwards words can be indicated by words like climbing retreating or ascending depending on whether it is an across clue or a down clue or by directional indicators such as going North meaning upwards or West right to left letters can be replaced or removed with indicators such as nothing rather than excellence meaning replace E in a word with O the letter I can be indicated by me or one the letter O can be indicated by nought nothing zero or a ring since it visually resembles one the letter X might be clued as a cross or ten as in the Roman numeral or an illiterate s signature or sounds like your old flame homophone for ex Senselessness is solved by e because e is what remains after removing less ness from sense With the different types of wordplay and definition possibilities the composer of a cryptic puzzle is presented with many different possible ways to clue a given answer Most desirable are clues that are clean but deceptive with a smooth surface reading that is the resulting clue looks as natural a phrase as possible The Usenet newsgroup rec puzzles crosswords has a number of clueing competitions where contestants all submit clues for the same word and a judge picks the best one In principle each cryptic clue is usually sufficient to define its answer uniquely so it should be possible to answer each clue without use of the grid In practice the use of checks is an important aid to the solver Other variants editThese are common crossword variants that vary more from a regular crossword than just an unusual grid shape or unusual clues these crossword variants may be based on different solving principles and require a different solving skill set Cipher crosswords edit Cipher crosswords were invented in Germany in the 19th century Published under various trade names including Code Breakers Code Crackers and Kaidoku and not to be confused with cryptic crosswords ciphertext puzzles are commonly known as cryptograms a cipher crossword replaces the clues for each entry with clues for each white cell of the grid an integer from 1 to 26 inclusive is printed in the corner of each The objective as any other crossword is to determine the proper letter for each cell in a cipher crossword the 26 numbers serve as a cipher for those letters cells that share matching numbers are filled with matching letters and no two numbers stand for the same letter All resultant entries must be valid words Usually at least one number s letter is given at the outset English language cipher crosswords are nearly always pangrammatic all letters of the alphabet appear in the solution As these puzzles are closer to codes than quizzes they require a different skillset many basic cryptographic techniques such as determining likely vowels are key to solving these Given their pangrammaticity a frequent start point is locating where Q and U must appear Diagramless crosswords edit In a diagramless crossword often called a diagramless for short or in the UK a skeleton crossword or carte blanche the grid offers overall dimensions but the locations of most of the clue numbers and shaded squares are unspecified A solver must deduce not only the answers to individual clues but how to fit together partially built up clumps of answers into larger clumps with properly set shaded squares Some of these puzzles follow the traditional symmetry rule others have left right mirror symmetry and others have greater levels of symmetry or outlines suggesting other shapes If the symmetry of the grid is given the solver can use it to his her advantage Fill in crosswords edit Main article Fill In puzzle A fill in crossword also known as crusadex or cruzadex features a grid and the full list of words to be entered in that grid but does not give explicit clues for where each word goes The challenge is figuring out how to integrate the list of words together within the grid so that all intersections of words are valid Fill in crosswords may often have longer word length than regular crosswords to make the crossword easier to solve and symmetry is often disregarded Fitting together several long words is easier than fitting together several short words because there are fewer possibilities for how the long words intersect together These types of crosswords are also used to demonstrate artificial intelligence abilities such as finding solutions to the puzzle based on a set of determined constraints 20 Cross figures edit Main article Cross figure A cross figure or crossnumber is the numerical analogy of a crossword in which the solutions to the clues are numbers instead of words Clues are usually arithmetical expressions but can also be general knowledge clues to which the answer is a number or year There are also numerical fill in crosswords Acrostic puzzles edit Main article Acrostic puzzle An acrostic is a type of word puzzle in eponymous acrostic form that typically consists of two parts The first is a set of lettered clues each of which has numbered blanks representing the letters of the answer The second part is a long series of numbered blanks and spaces representing a quotation or other text into which the answers for the clues fit In most forms of the puzzle the first letters of each correct clue answer read in order from clue A on down the list will spell out the author of the quote and the title of the work it is taken from this can be used as an additional solving aid Arroword edit The arroword is a variant of a crossword that does not have as many black squares as a true crossword but has arrows inside the grid with clues preceding the arrows It has been called the most popular word puzzle in many European countries and is often called the Scandinavian crossword as it is believed to have originated in Sweden 21 History edit nbsp Recreation of Arthur Wynne s original crossword puzzle from December 21 1913 The phrase cross word puzzle was first written in 1862 by Our Young Folks in the United States Crossword like puzzles for example Double Diamond Puzzles appeared in the magazine St Nicholas published since 1873 22 Another crossword puzzle appeared on September 14 1890 in the Italian magazine Il Secolo Illustrato della Domenica It was designed by Giuseppe Airoldi and titled Per passare il tempo To pass the time Airoldi s puzzle was a four by four grid with no shaded squares it included horizontal and vertical clues 23 Crosswords in England during the 19th century were of an elementary kind apparently derived from the word square a group of words arranged so the letters read alike vertically and horizontally and printed in children s puzzle books and various periodicals On December 21 1913 Arthur Wynne a journalist born in Liverpool England published a word cross puzzle in the New York World that embodied most of the features of the modern genre This puzzle is frequently cited as the first crossword puzzle and Wynne as the inventor An illustrator later reversed the word cross name to cross word 24 25 26 Crossword puzzles became a regular weekly feature in the New York World and spread to other newspapers the Pittsburgh Press for example was publishing them at least as early as 1916 27 and The Boston Globe by 1917 28 nbsp A 1925 Punch cartoon about The Cross Word Mania A man phones his doctor in the middle of the night asking for the name of a bodily disorder of seven letters of which the second letter must be N By the 1920s the crossword phenomenon was starting to attract notice In October 1922 newspapers published a comic strip by Clare Briggs entitled Movie of a Man Doing the Cross Word Puzzle with an enthusiast muttering 87 across Northern Sea Bird Hm m m starts with an M second letter is U I ll look up all the words starting with an M U mus musi mur murd Hot Dog Here tis Murre 29 In 1923 a humorous squib in The Boston Globe has a wife ordering her husband to run out and rescue the papers the part I want is blowing down the street What is it you re so keen about The Cross Word Puzzle Hurry please that s a good boy 30 In The New Yorker s inaugural issue from 1925 the Jottings About Town section observed Judging from the number of solvers in the subway and L trains the crossword puzzle bids fair to become a fad with New Yorkers 31 Also in 1925 the New York Public Library reported that The latest craze to strike libraries is the crossword puzzle and complained that when the puzzle fans swarm to the dictionaries and encyclopedias so as to drive away readers and students who need these books in their daily work can there be any doubt of the Library s duty to protect its legitimate readers 32 The first book of crossword puzzles was published by Simon amp Schuster in 1924 after a suggestion from co founder Richard Simon s aunt The publisher was initially skeptical that the book would succeed and only printed a small run at first The book was promoted with an included pencil and This odd looking book with a pencil attached to it 33 was an instant hit leading crossword puzzles to become a craze of 1924 To help promote its books Simon amp Schuster also founded the Amateur Cross Word Puzzle League of America which began the process of developing standards for puzzle design 26 34 Not all of the attention drawn to the crossword puzzle fad was positive A 1924 editorial in The New York Times complained of the sinful waste in the utterly futile finding of words the letters of which will fit into a prearranged pattern more or less complex This is not a game at all and it hardly can be called a sport solvers get nothing out of it except a primitive form of mental exercise and success or failure in any given attempt is equally irrelevant to mental development 35 A clergyman called the working of crossword puzzles the mark of a childish mentality and said There is no use for persons to pretend that working one of the puzzles carries any intellectual value with it 36 However another wrote a complete Bible Cross Word Puzzle Book Also in 1925 Time magazine noted that nine Manhattan dailies and fourteen other big newspapers were carrying crosswords and quoted opposing views as to whether This crossword craze will positively end by June or The crossword puzzle is here to stay 37 In 1925 The New York Times noted with approval a scathing critique of crosswords by The New Republic but concluded that Fortunately the question of whether the puzzles are beneficial or harmful is in no urgent need of an answer The craze evidently is dying out fast and in a few months it will be forgotten 38 and in 1929 declared The cross word puzzle it seems has gone the way of all fads 39 In 1930 a correspondent noted that Together with The Times of London yours is the only journal of prominence that has never succumbed to the lure of the cross word puzzle and said that The craze the fad stage has passed but there are still people numbering it to the millions who look for their daily cross word puzzle as regularly as for the weather predictions 40 The term crossword first appeared in the Oxford English Dictionary in 1933 41 The New York Times finally began to publish a crossword puzzle on 15 February 1942 spurred on by the idea that the puzzle could be a welcome distraction from the harsh news of World War II The New York Times s first puzzle editor was Margaret Petherbridge Farrar who was editor from 1942 to 1969 26 She was succeeded by Will Weng who was succeeded by Eugene T Maleska Since 1993 they have been edited by Will Shortz the Times fourth crossword editor Simon amp Schuster continues to publish the Crossword Puzzle Book Series books that it began in 1924 currently under the editorship of John M Samson The original series ended in 2007 after 258 volumes Since 2008 these books are now in the Mega series appearing three times per year and each featuring 300 puzzles The cryptic crossword variation originated in Britain in the mid 1920s Edward Powys Mathers set the first crossword to use entirely cryptic clues originally just for the enjoyment of his friends one of whom without permission submitted it to the Saturday Westminster Gazette The editors approached Mathers for more puzzles and published eleven more of these novel cryptic crosswords Upon the demise of the Saturday Westminster Mathers began setting puzzles for The Observer beginning a series of 670 cryptic crosswords which ended only with Mathers death in 1939 42 Mathers set his puzzles under the pen name of Torquemada after the first Grand Inquisitor of the Spanish Inquisition His successors as The Observer cryptic crossword setter followed his example Derrick Somerset Macnutt who took over at Mather s death chose the pen name Ximenes an Anglicization of the surname of Francisco Jimenez de Cisneros a Grand Inquisitor in Castile The current Observer cryptic compiler Jonathan Crowther sets under the name Azed a reversal of Deva another Grand Inquisitor Cryptic crosswords are popular in Britain some British Commonwealth nations and in a few other countries Many British newspapers publish both standard and cryptic crosswords The cryptic crossword was imported to the US in 1968 by composer and lyricist Stephen Sondheim in the New York magazine but never became widespread From 1977 to 2006 The Atlantic regularly featured a cryptic crossword Puzzler by the husband and wife team of Emily Cox and Henry Rathvon From 2006 to 2009 The Atlantic puzzler appeared only online In 2010 Cox and Rathvon s efforts began to appear monthly in The Wall Street Journal 43 The pair retired at the end of 2023 but the WSJ continues to offer a cryptic crossword each month In the United Kingdom the Sunday Express was the first newspaper to publish a crossword on November 2 1924 a Wynne puzzle adapted for the UK The first crossword in Britain according to Tony Augarde in his Oxford Guide to Word Games 1984 was in Pearson s Magazine for February 1922 nbsp Finalists competing in a crossword competition in New York City in 2019 The 2006 documentary Wordplay about enthusiasts of The New York Times s puzzle increased public interest in crosswords It highlighted attendees of Will Shortz s American Crossword Puzzle Tournament and other notable crossword enthusiasts including former US president Bill Clinton and comedian Jon Stewart 26 World War II edit Main article D Day Daily Telegraph crossword security alarm In 1944 Allied security officers were disturbed by the appearance in a series of crosswords in The Daily Telegraph of words that were secret code names for military operations planned as part of Operation Overlord Some cryptologists for Bletchley Park were selected after doing well in a crossword solving competition 44 Records edit According to Guinness World Records May 15 2007 the most prolific crossword compiler is Roger Squires of Ironbridge Shropshire UK On May 14 2007 he published his 66 666th crossword 45 equivalent to 2 million clues He is one of only four setters to have provided cryptic puzzles to The Times The Daily Telegraph The Guardian the Financial Times and The Independent He also holds the record for the longest word ever used in a published crossword the 58 letter Welsh town Llanfairpwllgwyngyllgogerychwyrndrobwllllantysiliogogogoch clued as an anagram Enthusiasts have compiled a number of record setting achievements in New York Times and other venues 46 The lowest word count in a published weekday size 15x15 puzzle is the June 29 2013 The New York Times crossword by Joe Krozel with just 50 words 47 The fewest shaded squares in a 15x15 American crossword is 17 leaving 208 white spaces set by the July 27 2012 Times crossword by Joe Krozel 48 The record for most crosswords published in The New York Times is held by Manny Nosowsky who has had 241 puzzles in that outlet A N Prahlada Rao crossword constructor from India has recorded in the Limca Book of Records in 2016 for constructing highest number of crosswords in Indian regional languages In 2019 his name has mentioned in the Kalam Book of World Records 49 50 Female crossword constructors edit Women editors such as Margaret Farrar were influential in the first few decades of puzzle making and women constructors such as Bernice Gordon and Elizabeth Gorski have each contributed hundreds of puzzles to The New York Times 51 However in recent years the number of women constructors has declined During the years that Will Weng and Eugene Maleska edited the New York Times crossword 1969 1993 women constructors accounted for 35 of puzzles 52 53 while during the editorship of Will Shortz 1993 present this percentage has gone down with women constructors including collaborations accounting for only 15 of puzzles in both 2014 and 2015 17 of puzzles published in 2016 13 the lowest in the Shortz Era in 2017 and 16 in 2018 54 55 Several reasons have been given for the decline in women constructors One explanation is that the gender imbalance in crossword construction is similar to that in related fields such as journalism and that more freelance male constructors than females submit puzzles on spec to The New York Times and other outlets 56 Another explanation is that computer assisted construction and the increased influence of computational approaches in generating word lists may be making crossword construction more like STEM fields in which women are underrepresented for a number of factors 52 However it has also been argued that this explanation risks propagating myths about gender and technology 57 Some have argued that the relative absence of women constructors and editors has had an influence on the content of the puzzles themselves and that clues and entries can be insensitive regarding language related to gender and race 58 59 Margaret Irvine suggested that lack of confidence was a barrier 60 Several approaches have been suggested to develop more women in the field including mentoring novice women constructors and encouraging women constructors to publish their puzzles independently 61 57 Crossword venues other than New York Times have recently published higher percentages of women than that puzzle In the spring of 2018 Patti Varol and Amy Reynaldo organized and edited a pack of 18 puzzles constructed by women called Women of Letters 62 Inspired by this Laura Braunstein and Tracy Bennett launched The Inkubator a twice monthly subscription service that will publish crosswords constructed by cis women trans women and woman aligned constructors 63 The Inkubator raised over 30 000 in its initial Kickstarter campaign 64 and began publishing puzzles on January 17 2019 A book of 100 puzzles Inkubator Crosswords 100 Audacious Puzzles by Women and Nonbinary Creators was published in 2022 65 On February 8 2023 they announced to subscribers that 2023 would be their final year as a subscription service 66 Non English languages editThis section possibly contains original research Please improve it by verifying the claims made and adding inline citations Statements consisting only of original research should be removed July 2021 Learn how and when to remove this message Owing to the large number of words ending with a vowel Italian crossword makers have perhaps the most difficult task The right margin and the bottom can be particularly difficult to put together From such a perspective Swedish crossword makers have a far easier task Especially in the large picture crosswords both conjugation of verbs and declension of adjectives and nouns are allowed A Swedish clue like kan sattas i munnen sked can be put in the mouth spoon can be grammatically changed den kan sattas i munnen skeden it can be put in the mouth the spoon as the definite form of a noun includes declension Orthography edit This section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed November 2020 Learn how and when to remove this message From their origin in New York crosswords have spread to many countries and languages In languages other than English the status of diacritics varies according to the orthography of the particular language thus in Afrikaans all diacritical markings are ignored Words such as TEE meaning opposed and TEE meaning tea are both simply written TEE The same goes for SE say and SE belonging to and many others in Czech and Slovak diacritics are respected and ch being considered one letter occupies one square in Dutch crosswords the ij digraph is considered one letter filling one square and the IJ and the Y see Dutch alphabet are considered distinct Rules may vary in other word games in Esperanto crosswords diacritics are respected as they form separate letters graphemes 67 in French in Spanish and in Italian accent marks and most other diacritical markings are ignored except the tilde in Spanish for instance in French the final E of answer ETRE can double as the final E of CONGE when written ETRE and CONGE but in Spanish N and N are distinct letters In Frisian diacritics are fully respected in German language crosswords the umlauts a o and u are dissolved into ae oe and ue and ss is dissolved into ss in Hungarian diacritics are either fully respected or not respected where they denote length that is I I O o O O U U U U are considered the same but not A A and E E which mark different sounds although the difference between the short long pairs of letters is a distinctive feature in Hungarian Digraphs fill two squares in Irish crosswords the accents on A E I o U are all respected so for example the I in SIB cannot double as the I in SLIABH in Latin diacritics are ignored Therefore A is considered the same as Ă or A Ecclesiastical Latin is normally used See the monthly magazine of Latin crosswords Hebdomada Aenigmatum as a reference 68 in Portuguese diacritics are ignored with the exception of C Therefore A could be checked with A or A in Romanian diacritics are ignored in Russian Yo doubles as E but J is considered different from I the soft sign and the hard sign occupy a separate square different from that of the previous letter in Spanish crosswords the digraphs ch and ll fill two squares although in some old crosswords from prior to the 1996 spelling reform they filled one square See also Digraph orthography Digraphs versus letters and Diacritic Grid design clues and conventions edit nbsp Japanese style nbsp Swedish style nbsp Barred grid where bold bars are used instead of shaded blocks to separate the words nbsp A Bengali crossword grid nbsp Person solving a Finnish crossword puzzle French language crosswords are smaller than English language ones and not necessarily square there are usually 8 13 rows and columns totaling 81 130 squares They need not be symmetric and two letter words are allowed unlike in most English language puzzles Compilers strive to minimize use of shaded squares A black square usage of 10 is typical Georges Perec compiled many 9 9 grids for Le Point with four or even three black squares 69 Rather than numbering the individual clues the rows and columns are numbered as on a chessboard All clues for a given row or column are listed against its number as separate sentences In Italy crosswords are usually oblong and larger than French ones 13 21 being a common size As in France they usually are not symmetrical two letter words are allowed and the number of shaded squares is minimized Nouns including surnames and the infinitive or past participle of verbs are allowed as are abbreviations in larger crosswords it is customary to put at the center of the grid phrases made of two to four words or forenames and surnames A variant of Italian crosswords does not use shaded squares words are delimited by thickening the grid Another variant starts with a blank grid the solver must insert both the answers and the shaded squares and across and down clues are either ordered by row and column or not ordered at all Modern Hebrew is normally written with only the consonants vowels are either understood or entered as diacritical marks This can lead to ambiguities in the entry of some words and compilers generally specify that answers are to be entered in ktiv male with some vowels or ktiv haser without vowels Further since Hebrew is written from right to left but Roman numerals are used and written from left to right there can be an ambiguity in the description of lengths of entries particularly for multi word phrases Different compilers and publications use differing conventions for both of these issues In the Japanese language crossword because of the writing system one syllable typically katakana is entered into each white cell of the grid rather than one letter resulting in the typical solving grid seeming small in comparison to those of other languages Any second Yōon character is treated as a full syllable and is rarely written with a smaller character Even cipher crosswords have a Japanese equivalent although pangrammaticity does not apply Crosswords with kanji to fill in are also produced but in far smaller number as it takes far more effort to construct one Despite Japanese having three writing forms hiragana katakana and kanji they are rarely mixed in a single crossword puzzle The design of Japanese crossword grids often follows two additional rules that shaded cells may not share a side i e they may not be orthogonally contiguous and that the corner squares must be white A N Prahlada Rao based in Bangalore has composed constructed some 35 000 crossword puzzles in the language Kannada including 7 500 crosswords based on films made in Kannada with a total of 10 00 000 ten lakhs or one million clues 70 71 His name was recorded in the Limca Book Of Records in 2015 for creating the highest number of crosswords in any Indian Regional Language He continued to hold this title through 2016 and 2017 72 In 2008 a five volume set of his puzzles was released followed by 7 more volumes in 2017 73 Bengali is also well known for its crossword puzzles Crosswords are published regularly in most Bengali dailies and periodicals The grid system is similar to the British style and two letter words are usually not allowed In Poland crosswords typically use British style grids but some do not have shaded cells Shaded cells are often replaced by boxes with clues such crosswords are called Swedish puzzles or Swedish style crosswords In a vast majority of Polish crosswords nouns are the only allowed words Swedish crosswords are mainly in the illustrated photos or drawings in line clue style typical of the Swedish style grid The Swedish style grid picture crosswords uses no clue numbers Instead clues are contained in the cells which do not contain answers with arrows indicating where and in what direction to fill in answers Arrows can be omitted from clue cells in which case the convention is for the answer to go horizontally to the right of the clue cell or if the clue cell is split vertically and contains two clues for the answer to go horizontally to the right for the top clue and vertically below for the bottom clue This style of grid is also used in several countries other than Sweden often in magazines but also in daily newspapers The grid often has one or more photos replacing a block of squares as a clue to one or several answers for example the name of a pop star or some kind of rhyme or phrase that can be associated with the photo These puzzles usually have no symmetry in the grid but instead often have a common theme literature music nature geography events of a special year etc This tradition prospered already in the mid 1900s in family magazines and sections of newspapers Then the specialised magazines took off Around the turn of the millennium approximately half a dozen Swedish magazine publishers produced specialised crossword magazines totaling more than twenty titles often published on a monthly basis The oldest extant crossword magazine published in Swedish is Krysset 74 from Bonnier founded in 1957 Additionally nearly all newspapers publish crosswords of some kind and at weekends often devote specialised sections in the paper to crosswords and similar type of pastime material Both major evening dailies Aftonbladet and Expressen publish a weekly crossword supplement named Kryss amp Quiz and Korsord 75 respectively Both are available as paid supplements on Mondays and Tuesdays as part of the ongoing competition between the two newspapers Construction editAmerican style crosswords edit In typical themed American style crosswords the theme is created first as a set of symmetric long across answers will be needed around which the grid can be created 76 77 Since the grid will typically have 180 degree rotational symmetry the answers will need to be also thus a typical 15 15 square American puzzle might have two 15 letter entries and two 13 letter entries that could be arranged appropriately in the grid e g one 15 letter entry in the third row and the other symmetrically in the 13th row one 13 letter entry starting in the first square of the 6th row and the other ending in the last square of the 10th row 77 78 The theme must not only be funny or interesting but also internally consistent In the April 26 2005 by Sarah Keller mentioned above the five themed entries contained in the different parts of a tree SQUAREROOT TABLELEAF WARDROBETRUNK BRAINSTEM and BANKBRANCH In this puzzle CHARTER OAK would not be an appropriate entry as all the other entries contain different parts of a tree not the name of a kind of tree Similarly FAMILY TREE would not be appropriate unless it were used as a revealer for the theme frequently clued with a phrase along the lines and a hint to Given the existing entries SEED MONEY would also be unacceptable as all the other theme entries end in the part of a tree as opposed to beginning with it though the puzzle could certainly be changed to have a mix of words in different positions 76 Once a consistent appropriate theme has been chosen a grid is designed around that theme following a set of basic principles Generally most American puzzles are 15 15 squares if another size they typically have an odd number of rows and columns e g 21 21 for Sunday size puzzles Games magazine will accept 17 17 puzzles Simon amp Schuster accepts both 17 17 and 19 19 puzzles and The New York Times requires diagramless puzzles to be 17 17 79 The odd number of squares on a side ensures that achieving symmetry is easier with even numbered puzzles the central block of four squares makes constructing a symmetrical puzzle considerably more difficult 80 The black squares must be arranged so as to 1 ensure there are no two letter words 2 form 180 degree rotational symmetry so that if the grid is turned upside down the pattern of black squares remains the same 3 ensure that every letter is checked appears in both an across and a down word 4 not occupy too much of the puzzle generally speaking 16 of the puzzle is considered a rough limit for the percentage of black squares 5 ensure that the entire puzzle has all over interlock that is that the black squares do not cut the puzzle into separate sections and 6 ensure that generally no non theme entry is longer than any of the theme entries In addition it is considered advisable to minimize the number of so called cheater black squares i e black squares whose removal would not change the word count of the puzzle but which make it easier to fill by shortening the length of the words therein 77 78 81 The grid is then filled with suitable words keeping in mind that 1 no word can be repeated in the grid with the exception of prepositions or articles 2 profanity or graphic or unpleasant words are generally not allowed 3 obscurity is strongly discouraged in easy puzzles and should be kept to a minimum in more difficult puzzles where two obscure words should never be allowed to cross and ideally where the obscure word would be of interest to most solvers a genus of little known water bugs would not be a good choice 4 uncommon abbreviations and variant foreign spellings should be avoided as well as the use of crosswordese those words that no longer appear in common speech but that occur frequently in crosswords due to their favorable letter combinations such as the Asian buffalo ANOA 5 in modern puzzles pop figures and corporate and brand names are generally considered acceptable 6 no made up words are permitted there should be a dictionary or other reference that can cite each entry if asked 77 81 Modern constructors frequently although not always use software to speed up the task Several programs are available of which the most widely accepted is Crossword Compiler 76 These programs although they cannot create themes and cannot distinguish between good fill fun interesting words vs dull obscurity do speed up the process and will allow the constructor to realize if they have hit a dead end 82 Crossword puzzle payments for standard 15 15 puzzles from the major outlets range from 50 Games to 500 The New York Times while payments for 21 21 puzzles range from 250 Newsday to 1 500 The New York Times 83 The compensation structure of crosswords generally entails authors selling all rights to their puzzles upon publication and as a result receiving no royalties from republication of their work in books or other forms Software editSoftware that aids in creating crossword puzzles has been written since at least 1976 84 one popular example was Crossword Magic for the Apple II in the 1980s 85 The earliest software relied on people to input a list of fill words and clues and automatically maps the answers onto a suitable grid This is a search problem in computer science because there are many possible arrangements to be checked against the rules of construction Any given set of answers might have zero one or multiple legal arrangements Modern open source libraries exist that attempt to efficiently generate legal arrangements from a given set of answers 86 In the late 1990s the transition began from mostly hand created arrangements to computer assisted which creators generally say has allowed authors to produce more interesting and creative puzzles reducing crosswordese 87 Modern software includes large databases of clues and answers allowing the computer to randomly select words for the puzzle potentially with guidance from the user as to the theme or a specific set of words to pick with greater probability Many serious users add words to the database as an expression of personal creativity or for use in a desired theme Software can also be used to assist the user in finding words for a specific spot in an arrangement by quickly searching through the dictionary for all words that fit 87 In 1998 in Jakarta publisher Elex Media Komputindo Gramedia Group published a crossword software entitled Teka Teki Silang Komputer Computerized Crossword Puzzle Eng in diskette form It is the first Crossword Puzzle software published in Indonesia Created by Sukmono Bayu Adhi the software is archived in the National Library of the Republic of Indonesia Salemba Library Jakarta 88 Notation editThis section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed June 2020 Learn how and when to remove this message Originally Petherbridge called the two dimensions of the crossword puzzle Horizontal and Vertical Among various numbering schemes the standard became that in which only the start squares of each word were numbered from left to right and top to bottom 1 Horizontal and 1 Vertical and the like were names for the clues the cross words or the grid locations interchangeably Later in the Times these terms commonly became across and down and notations for clues could either use the words or the letters A and D with or without hyphens See also edit nbsp Games portal Bananagrams Cross Sums Crosswordese Merv Griffin s Crosswords a crossword based game show that debuted in fall 2007 People Puzzler a game show based on the pop culture crossword puzzles in People Magazine currently airing on Game Show Network Scrabble see also Scrabble variants Str8ts Sudoku The Cross Wits a crossword based game show that ran in the 1970s and 1980s Upwords Wheel of Fortune a letter based game show that incorporated crosswords in 2016 Word search Wordplay a 2006 documentary film about crossword puzzlesReferences edit Shortz Will April 8 2001 Endpaper How to Solve The New York Times Crossword Puzzle The New York Times American style crosswords Theguardian Berry Patrick 2015 Crossword Constructor s Handbook pp 62 80 D S MacNutt with A Robins Ximenes on the art of the crossword Methuen amp Co Ltd London 1966 p 49 How to Make a Crossword Puzzle crosswordhobbyist com a b c d e f Identified theme types Cruciverb com Retrieved 5 March 2013 Der Kevin G New York Times crossword of October 7 2011 XWordInfo com Retrieved 5 March 2013 Gaffney Matt Matt Gaffney s Weekly Crossword Contest Frequently Asked Questions Retrieved 30 September 2015 Gaffney Matt 14 August 2015 Eight Isn t Enough Retrieved 30 September 2015 Gaffney Matt Contest Crosswords 101 The Wall Street Journal Dow Jones amp Company Inc Retrieved 18 Feb 2024 PastWSJCCsolutions Past WSJ Crossword Contests amp Solutions XWord Muggles Forum Retrieved 18 Feb 2024 Pahk Joon 2012 05 09 Comment Thursday May 9 2012 Diary of a Crossword Fiend Retrieved 2019 11 25 Quantum xwordinfo com Farrell Jeremiah New York Times puzzle of Tuesday November 5 1996 xwordinfo com Retrieved 16 January 2017 Amende Coral 2001 The Crossword Obsession New York Berkley Books ISBN 978 0756790868 Tausig Ben New York Times puzzle of Thursday September 1 2016 xwordinfo com Retrieved 16 January 2017 Roeder Oliver September 2016 One of the Most Important Crosswords in New York Times History Slate Retrieved 16 January 2017 Cryptic crosswords A puzzling British obsession www bbc com Retrieved 2021 10 31 a b Hardcastle D n d Cryptic crossword clues Generating text with hidden meaning Poole David L Mackworth Alan K 2010 Artificial Intelligence Foundations of Computational Agents New York Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 51900 7 Arroword puzzler com Retrieved May 17 2011 St Nicholas September 1875 page 66 Childrenslibrary org Retrieved 2013 11 26 Storia delle parole crociate e del cruciverba in Italian Crucienigmi Retrieved August 28 2009 The Crossword Puzzle Massachusetts Institute of Technology August 1997 Archived from the original on 2003 03 02 Retrieved 2010 12 18 Bellis Mary The History of Crossword Puzzles About com Archived from the original on July 17 2012 Retrieved 2010 12 18 a b c d Amlen Deb How the Crossword Became an American Pastime Smithsonian Retrieved 2020 01 06 Cross Word Puzzle The Pittsburgh Press June 11 1916 Comic section s fifth page The Boston Globe April 8 1917 p 43 contains a puzzle and a solution to a previous week s puzzle Movie of a Man Doing the Cross Word Puzzle by Briggs Morning Oregonian October 3 1922 p 14 also published in several other newspapers There Goes My Crossword Puzzle Get Up Please The Boston Daily Globe October 1 1923 p 7 Jottings About Town The New Yorker February 21 1925 p 30 Report of the New York Public Library for 1924 published by The Library 1925 Frederick Lewis Allen 1931 Only Yesterday Harper and Row p 159 of 1964 Perennial Library paperback reprint Best crossword puzzles Writers Sunday 22 August 2021 Topics of the Times The New York Times November 17 1924 p 18 Condemns Cross Word Fad The New York Times December 23 1924 p 17 Barometer Time January 5 1925 Archived from the original on January 22 2009 Retrieved 2008 08 05 Topics of the Times Sees Harm Not Education The New York Times March 10 1925 p 20 All About the Insidious Game of Anagrams The New York Times December 29 1929 p BR3 Richard H 1930 The Lure of the Puzzle The New York Times February 4 1930 p 20 crossword OED Online March 2017 Oxford University Press accessed April 28 2017 Millington Roger The Strange World of the Crossword excerpt Retrieved 18 Feb 2024 Cox Emily Rathvon Henry Cryptic Puzzles by Emily Cox amp Henry Rathvon Cox Rathvon Hex Retrieved 17 Feb 2024 The Daily Telegraph 80 Years of Cryptic Crosswords p 44 Pat Ella Crossword setter hits puzzling landmark Richard Savill The Daily Telegraph May 15 2007 XWord Info Archived from the original on 2020 01 01 Retrieved 2020 04 14 New York Times Saturday June 29 2013 Xwordinfo com Retrieved 2022 04 29 Friday July 27 2012 crossword by Joe Krozel Xwordinfo com 2012 07 27 Retrieved 2013 11 26 Most Crosswords Created Regional Language The Coca Cola Company Retrieved 2021 06 28 World Records 2019 Kalams World Records Elizabeth C Gorski xwordinfo com Retrieved 17 January 2017 a b Shechtman Anna 2014 Puzzle Trouble Women and Crosswords in the Age of Autofill The American Reader Retrieved 17 January 2017 Steinberg David The Pre Shortzian Puzzle Project Retrieved 17 January 2014 Women constructors in the Shortz Era xwordinfo com Retrieved 17 January 2017 Kosman Joshua Picciotto Henry 2014 Puzzling Women Where are the female constructors thenation com Archived from the original on 2 February 2017 Retrieved 18 January 2017 Tausig Ben 21 August 2013 The Crossword Puzzle Where d the Women Go The Hairpin Archived from the original on 22 April 2017 Retrieved 17 January 2017 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint unfit URL link a b Elizabeth Gorski New York Times Crossword Creator Ravishly com 2014 Retrieved 17 January 2017 Graham Ruth 2016 Why Is the New York Times Crossword So Clueless About Race and Gender Slate com Retrieved 17 January 2017 Jeffries Adrianne 2017 The NYT Crossword Is Old and Kind Of Racist The Outline Retrieved 14 June 2017 Alan Connor 10 April 2017 Crossword blog meet the setter Nutmeg The Guardian Retrieved 18 July 2023 Reynaldo Amy 2014 Women and Crossword Construction Part 1 Why the underrepresentation Diary of a Crossword Fiend Retrieved 17 January 2017 Women of Letters Patti Varol Gavin Hailey The Inkubator Is on a Mission to Publish More Female Crossword Puzzle Constructors Slate com Slate Retrieved 16 January 2019 The Inkubator Kickstarter Retrieved 16 January 2019 Inkubator Crosswords Andrews McMeel Publishing Retrieved 2023 03 25 the following announcement recently went to our subscribers After much careful thought the Inkubator team has made the decision that 2023 will be our last year as a subscription service Twitter Retrieved 2023 03 25 Home www semajnodeenigmoj com Archived from the original on 20 April 2022 Retrieved 25 March 2018 Latin crosswords Cruciverba in latino Aenigmata latina Latincrosswords com Histoire des mots croises Chapitre VI Homepage urbanet ch Archived from the original on 2014 04 24 Retrieved 2013 11 26 Making clues Thehindubusinessline in 2001 05 14 Retrieved 2013 11 26 Details www vijaykarnatakaepaper com Limca Book of Records www limcabookofrecords in Karnataka Bangalore News Kannada crossword puzzles launched The Hindu 2008 02 17 Archived from the original on 2009 07 24 Retrieved 2013 11 26 Krysset klassikern med kvalitet och kunskap Krysset se Retrieved 2012 01 04 in Swedish Dagens bilaga med Expressen Korsord Expressen se Retrieved 2012 01 04 in Swedish a b c Salomon Nancy Notes from a Mentor cruciverb com Retrieved 25 February 2013 a b c d Rosen Mel 1995 Random House Puzzlemaker s Handbook New York Random House ISBN 9780812925449 a b Kurzban Stanley A 1981 The Compleat Cruciverbalist Or How to Solve and Compose Crossword Puzzles for Fun and Profit Van Nostrand Reinhold ISBN 978 0442257385 Publisher Specifications cruciverb com Retrieved 25 February 2013 Gore Molly 15 November 2007 Math professor and crossword constructor gives puzzle advice The Santa Clara Santa Clara California Retrieved 25 February 2013 a b Basic Rules cruciverb com Retrieved 25 February 2013 Holmes Kristin E 29 April 2007 A passion to fit words together The Philadelphia Inquirer archived at crosswordtournament com Archived from the original on 20 April 2013 Retrieved 25 February 2013 Publisher chart cruciverb com Retrieved 25 February 2013 Dr Fill Vies for Crossword Solving Supremacy 19 Sep 2014 1980 84 Misc 9 July 2010 Crossword Layout Generator Open Source 17 November 2019 Archived from the original on 17 November 2019 Retrieved 17 November 2019 a b Julie Leibach 19 September 2014 Inside the Box Crossword Puzzle Constructing in the Computer Age The catalog can be accessed online at http opac perpusnas go id DetailOpac aspx id 62691Further reading editThe Crossword Obsession by Coral Amende ISBN 0 425 18157 X Crossworld by Marc Romano ISBN 0 7679 1757 X Alan Connor 2015 The Crossword Century 100 Years of Witty Wordplay Ingenious Puzzles and Linguistic Mischief Avery ISBN 978 1592409389 External links edit nbsp Media related to Crosswords at Wikimedia Commons Why are crossword puzzles symmetrical from The Straight Dope Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Crossword amp oldid 1219919644, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.