Thursday, 5 April 2012

Scrabble In Pakistan

Scrabble was started playing in 1989 in Karachi,Pakistan!!!!
And today Pakistan Scrabble Association PSA has last 23 years of success!!
Without any government or any other support!!
Mrs.Gosphi B.Avari is the owners of Avari group and she owns beach luxury hotel as well so she has dedicated a separate area for scrabble!!!
In June 2012 Pakistan Scrabble Association is going to have its 24th Pakistan Scrabble Champion in Pakistan known as national championship!!

Scrabble History

Scrabble was started played in gulf region in 1966!!!!

Wednesday, 4 April 2012

Cool Words from AA to ZZZ


Do you read the dictionary just to scout for cool words?

Well, I think you'll like it here!

Why? Because this page is just one giant cool words list dedicated to lovers of word games and puzzles.
For the keen Scrabblers, I've pinched quite a few unusual words from The Official Scrabble Dictionary, which is the 'secret' adjudicator used in many online and electronic word games.
If you're a cruciverbalist (a crossword lover, that is), you'll find plenty of tasty crosswordese here too!
If spelling and vocabulary are more your thing, some of the coolest words here come from word lists I've taken from all the major vocabulary exams and spelling bees.
But enough chatter. Let's get to why you popped by. Here is Word Buff's favorite list of cool words from AA to ZZZ... 
AA
n. A type of volcanic rock having a rough and jagged surface. The name is Hawaiian in origin and pronounced ah-ah.
AA is one of three types of solidified flow lava, a fact which I mention only as an excuse to throw in my favorite type, which is called PAHOEHOE. The third type has the rather mundane name ofPILLOW LAVA, which I include here only for completeness.
Of course, the serious Scrabbler will be more likely to recognize AAas an indispensable vowel-dump, and the very first word in theOfficial Scrabble Dictionary.

It is also the least interesting palindrome I know.
BANNS
npl. A formal proclamation announcing intent to marry.
This word jumped out at me when I was watching the very word-buff-esque documentary Spellbound. While participants in the final rounds are usually challenged with much longer words, this harmless looking five-letter critter knocked out a favorite (indeed MY favorite!) contender for the prize.
Despite being such a short word, it is very difficult to guess its spelling from its pronunciation (it is pronounced banz), since there is no vocal indication of the second N.
This word has also been known to trip up the odd Scrabbler. For an entirely different reason though. When a Scrabble player learns a word like BANNS, it is easy to assume it to be the plural of the non-existent BANN*. Uh oh! There's an asterisk!
CACAFOGO
n. A hot-tempered person. Also spelled CACAFUEGO.
Today's word began its life as CAGAFUEGO*, which was a nickname used by 16th century sailors for their Spanish ship Nuestra Señora de la Concepción. The choice of name came from a combination of the Spanish words Cagare, meaning to excrete, and Fuego, meaningfire. Hence Cagafuego, if taken literally, meant excrete fire, which I assume means that the ship went really fast.
However, the G was eventually corrupted to a C, resulting in the word CACAFUEGO (no asterisk!). And from there a further corruption resulted in today's word.
Interestingly, Collins gives the definition of CACAFOGO as spitfire, which Chambers in turn defines as a 'hot-tempered person'. So, did the term spitfire arise as a euphemism for shitfire which would be the literal translation of today's word? This worse-than-amateur lexicographer doesn't know the answer right now, but I'll certainly let you know if I find out.
And for Scrabble-buffs... This word came up during my interview with Andrew Fisher, a champion Scrabble player, as his answer to the question 'What is the most unlikely word you've ever played?'.
Well, I checked it out, and it certainly would be hard to beat. There are 40,161 eight-letter words allowed in Scrabble. If you were to list all these words from highest probability to lowest, Andrew's play ofCACAFOGO would come in at position 37,934!
And if that isn't unlikely enough for you, the probability of this word appearing in a New York Times crossword puzzle, if the last few decades are anything to go by, is precisely zero.
DREIDEL
n. A wooden, spinning top used in a gambling game, usually played by children during an eight-day Jewish festival called Hanukkah (orFestival of Lights).
Dreidel
Pronounced dray'dl, this word is bound to eliminate a few spellers from the stage.I stumbled across this word while I was researching a page on The Hebrew Alphabet. The reason this word turned up during that research is that each of the four faces of a DREIDEL displays a letter of the Hebrew alphabet. The four letters traditionally used areNUNGIMELHEH, and SIN, although in Israel SIN is usually replaced by PEH. In the image above, the front-facing green letter is GIMEL, and the partly visible red letter is HEH.
This research helped explain a delightful clue I encountered for this word in a New York Times crossword puzzle. Namely...
Place to see a nun
Cute heh?
For the Scrabble player, who is also allowed to use the alternative spelling of DREIDL, today's word generates three possible bonus plays: DREIDELDREIDELS, and DREIDLS. Of these, only DREIDLShas any anagrams (namely, RIDDLES and SLIDDER).
ERUV
n. A demarcated area within which Jewish religious restrictions are relaxed. The plural is variously written as ERUVIMERUVIN, or the more clunky and chauvinistic ERUVS.

I came across this word in From Square One, a charming story about crosswords by Dean Olsher...

Some Orthodox Jews extend the idea of the house-hold by stretching a string, called an eruv, around their neighborhood, so that any activity allowed only in the home on the Sabbath is therefore extended to the space defined by the eruv. I think of the crossword as a mental eruv.
HADEDAH
n. A bird of the ibis family, found in large numbers throughout South Africa.
The technical name is actually Bostrychia hagedash, but the logophile will much prefer the palindrome.
It is a large, heavy-set, dull-coloured bird, which gets its common name from the raucous call it makes when flying... 'haa-haa-haa-hadedah'.
In fact, quite a few birds have common names that are imitations of their calls. Other onomatopoeic birds I've stumbled across include...
BOBWHITE
CUCKOO
CURLEW
DICKCISSEL
KIWI
MOPOKE 
or MOREPORK
MOTMOT
SISKIN
TOWHEE
WHIPPOORWILL
WILLET
KATIPO
n. A very poisonous spider found in New Zealand.Many people who first play to the International Scrabble Dictionaryare understandably skeptical of the crazy words they see sprinkled across the Scrabble board. When playing such people, it's important to have some convincing evidence at hand...
A Canadian tourist in New Zealand has suffered heart inflammation after apparently being bitten on the penis by a spider. The tourist fell asleep naked on a beach in Northland, on the far tip of the north island, after going skinny dipping, the NZ Herald reported.
After the bite from the highly poisonous katipo spider, the 22-year-old began to suffer high blood pressure, rapid heartbeat and a severely swollen penis.— ninemsn.com.au, 14 March, 2010


LAODICEAN
adj. Indifferent to religious or, sometimes, political matters.
Aside from being a rather handy word to describe myself, this word caught my eye as another handy spelling bee torpedo. In particular, it was the last correctly spelled word in the 2009 Scripps National Spelling Bee, leaving 13 year old Kavya Shivashankar as the new champion. (In the previous year, Kavya was eliminated in Round 11 after incorrectly spelling ECRASE.)
This word derives from the name of an ancient biblical city calledLaodicea. In the Book of Revelations, the inhabitants of this city are ridiculed for being 'neither hot nor cold' in their faith.
Unfortunately for North American Scrabble players, Laodicean is deemed by Webster's to be capitalized, so you can't play it in Scrabble. For those playing to the International Scrabble Dictionary, the story is different, since Chambers appends the Scrabbler's much-loved clause 'also without cap'.
As I've said before, Chambers is my friend ;-)
NUMNAH
n. The padding placed between a saddle and a horse to reduce rubbing.
Here's a short video to show you how it became one of my cool words...
OTARY
n. A type of seal, including fur seals and sea lions, with well-developed external ears.
Now seals are all very interesting, but...
the Scrabble player is more likely to get excited by the following very cool properties of this word...

Firstly, it has three handy front hooks: NOTARY, ROTARY, andVOTARY.

Secondly, its plural is the high-probability bingo OTARIES, which also takes these front hooks, and has the equally useful anagramOARIEST.

Thirdly, consider this question...
If I draw seven tiles from a full tile bag, what is the most likely bingo to be drawn?
Now, since we know the exact distribution of the tiles in a standard Scrabble set, we can work out, for each valid seven-letter word, how many combinations of tiles allow that word to be formed. The winner is the word that can be formed from the largest number of combinations. Although the blanks spice things up a bit, this is a trivial problem by a mathematician's standards.
And the answer? Well, it turns out to be OTARINE, the adjectival form of OTARY!
If you take the time to learn this word, and you practice recognising it from a scrambled rack, you will almost certainly get to play it. If not, you will at least get to witness it being played by somebody else.
And that's why Scrabble players are so strangely familiar with the taxonomy of seals.
QI
n. Pronounced chee, and more commonly spelt CHI, a term used in Chinese medicine to describe the life-force supposed to flow through a body. Bad health is often attributed to an obstruction to a person's qi.
No single word has had a greater impact on Scrabble than this simple two-letter word. When it was first introduced into the Scrabbler's lexicon in the 1990s, Q-stick endgames virtually became a thing of the past. In almost all games now, a player can unload the Q onto a floating I, if they don't have one themself, to avoid the dreaded 20 point endgame catastrophe.
To show how important this single word is amongst a fellowship of nearly one quarter of a million Scrabble words, a computer simulation of one million games, performed some years ago, confirmed that QIwas played in more games than any other word.
It seems that QI is to Scrabble as ERA is to crosswords.

SARDOODLEDOM*
n. Used in a derogatory way to describe a dramatization that is contrived and unconvincing (as in 'so much Sardoodledom').
Don't believe me? Ask this kid...
THIONINE
n. A dark crystalline powder yielding a violet dyestuff (hence its other name, Phenylene Violet) used in microscopy as a stainer. Also spelled THIONIN.
The combining form THIO-, meaning sulphur, usually signifies a chemical compound which has been formed by replacing certain oxygen atoms by sulphur atoms. The long list of Scrabbly chemicals produced in this way includes: THIOFURANTHIOLTHIONATE,THIONYLTHIOPHEN (also, THIOPHENE), THIOTEPA, and the frequently spotted five-vowel-eight THIOUREA.
The reason I singled out THIONINE from this impressive list comes from yet another delicious Scrabble anecdote from the delightful book Word Freak, by Stefan Fatsis...
In a 1999 World Scrabble Championship match between two of the world's best players, Nigel Richards and Adam Logan, an early play ofTHIONINE was extended first to ETHIONINE, and then again later in the game to the ten-letter gem METHIONINE!
Remarkably, both players knew this grand hooking sequence - the kind of once-in-a-lifetime play that Scrabble players live for.
UNUNUNIUM
n. A temporary scientific name assigned to the chemical element with atomic number 111 until the existence of this element has been formally ratified.
Want to know more about this one? Here is an article I wrote about Unununium one day at work when I was really bored. You'll find lots of other cool words in this article too!
WATERZOOI
n. A type of broth based on fish or chicken, with vegetables, cooked in a thick stock.
This word would make perfect grist for the Balderdash mill. After all, surely it will be easy to convince your opponents that waterzooi are 'small, hirsute, water-borne creatures'.
Be that as it may, this is not the reason for including this one on my list of cool words...
In 1995, Jim Geary, a professional Poker player cum Scrabble expert, reported on a brilliant endgame. In the dying moments of the game Geary was 90 points behind and held the rack B-E-E-I-O-R-W. He played off the letters B-E calculating a 1/68 chance of replacing these letters with A-T. It worked, allowing him to play ... you guessed it ...

ZYzzYVA
n. A type of weevil often referred to as a snouted beetle.

Famous among word play enthusiasts for being the last word in the English dictionary, it is sometimes even used to mean the last word on a subject.I like the following clue provided in the New York Times crossword of Saturday, December 11, 1999...
Insect that's the last word in the Scrabble Players Dictionary
Here's an example sentence...
Despite popular belief, ZYZZYVA is not, in fact, the ZYZZYVA of Scrabble.
And speaking of Scrabble, if you're wondering about the lower casezz in the title, you probably don't play it enough.

P.S. ZYZZYVA is also the name of a very cool Scrabble Helper.
ZZZ
n. An informal term for sleep.

But if you think at last you have found the ZYZZYVA of Scrabble... well... not quite. The plural is good too!

Aside from being the most frequently appearing word in mosquito spelling bees, ZZZ is one of only two words allowed in Scrabble containing a sequence of three repeated letters. The other is BRRR, an expression usually accompanied by a shiver. If you're a canine, you might write a grumpy letter of complaint to the Scrabble authorities, signing off with a sarcastic GRRR*.
Well, that's about it from me for now, but there's no reason the fun should stop there...

Sneaky Scrabble Words


For People Who Play To Win


KWYJIBO n. a big, dumb, balding North
American ape, with no chin — Bart Simpson
...and a short temper — Marge Simpson
Suppose near the end of a close game, you are leading by a small margin and decide to block the board to prevent your opponent from going out with a big score.To do this, you place a C in an awkward position 'knowing' that your opponent cannot make a parallel play.
To your dismay, however, your opponent places their H under the C to form CH, for just enough points to devastate your plans!
The problem here was that although you knew it was time to play defensively and block the board, you did not realize that the board was not really blocked because you did not know the word CH (a Scottish personal pronoun).
The lesson to take away is this...
Scrabble strategy sits on top of word knowledge, and therefore you must know lots of weird and wonderful Scrabble words before you worry about fine-tuning your strategic game. In other words, although both components of the game are very important, word knowledge is more urgent because strategy depends on it.
But what exactly are all the words allowed in Scrabble? I'm glad you asked...

Official Scrabble Words

Just what constitutes an allowable word in Scrabble can vary from place to place. Fortunately, you only have to worry about two of those places:North America, and the Rest of the World (United Kingdom, Australia, New Zealand, South Africa, and so on).
Why? Because there are two owners of the Scrabble trademark, and each one has its own official word list. Your decision then is pretty simple...
Here is where you can find a dictionary of all
words allowed in North American Scrabble

And here is where you can get yourself a dictionary of all
words allowed in International Scrabble

Of course, if you want to play Scrabble online, or enter an international tournament, you might want to get your hands on a copy of both of these tomes.
As always, there's a bit more to it than this. For more information you can read my Official Scrabble Word List (Long Version).

Scrabble Word Lists

If you're serious about winning at Scrabble, no matter how strategically brilliant you might be, you simply must sit down at some stage and learn hundreds (preferably thousands!) of words.
The best way to do this is to organize words into lists, each of which should have some kind of strategic importance. So here are some lists of very important Scrabble words to get you started. Each of the following links will take you to a page of useful words with a preamble explaining why you should learn them...
Collins Scrabble Words (CSW12)

Scrabble Word of the Day Archive

Cool Scrabble Words

Well, I did call this page 'Scrabble Words from AA to ZZZ', so...
Let's get a feel for the sorts of weird and wonderful words that are allowed in Scrabble. Below is a list containing an interesting and unusual Scrabble word for each letter of the alphabet. I'll give a brief definition here, but if I've talked about a word in more detail elsewhere at Word-BuffI'll format the word as a link...
AA
n. A type of lava.


BHOOT
n. a ghost, or other supernatural being in Indian mythology.

Bhoots are usually assumed to be trapped between death and a more permanent after-life as a result of some unsatisfactory ending to their life on earth.
Although bhoots often take on a human form, if you look carefully there are some giveaways. The most spooky giveaway in my opinion is the fact that their feet are back to front, with the heels facing forwards and the toes facing backwards.
While you're checking out their feet, by the way, you will probably also notice that they don't actually touch the ground, but rather float just above the surface of the earth.
About the only places I've actually come across the word bhoot 'in the wild' have been in the titles of second-rate Bollywood ghost-movies I was stuck watching in my hotel room in India a while back. Like this one...


AnagramBOOTH
VariantBHUT


CHLORODYNE
n. A medicine used for its hypnotic effect and pain relieving qualities.



GJETOST
n. A dark-brown Norwegian cheese, made primarily from goat's milk.



OTARINE
adj. Relating to a family of eared seals.


QI
n. The life-force presumed in Chinese medicine to flow through the body.


REREDOS
n. An ornamental paneled screen, usually located behind an altar.


UNUNUNIUM
n. The formal name used to describe the chemical element with atomic number 111 until its existence is confirmed, at which point it will be given 'proper' name.


WATERZOOI
n. A thick broth based on fish or chicken and vegetables.


ZZZ
n. The sound used in cartoons to denote sleeping.

How to Improve Vocabulary


Practical Vocabulary Building Strategies
First, I'm going to give you a handful of very effective techniques you can use to improve vocabulary for the 'real world'. But I don't want to stop there...

You see, Word Buff is primarily devoted to helping you win at word games. And the kinds of words you meet in word games are not what most people would call 'real world' words. Heck, some like to claim that many of these words are not even 'real' words at all!

So, after these introductory vocabulary building tips I'm going to invite you to join me on a fun excursion into the world of what I call word game vocabulary. To do this, I've put together a free 5 part email tutorialthat will really turbo-charge your vocabulary.

If you want to master Scrabble, crossword puzzles, or spelling bees — or if you just love learning weird and wonderful words — I think you'll enjoy it!
But we have to learn to walk before we can run...
Tips to Improve Vocabulary
Part I - Improve Vocabulary for Real Life
In my opinion, what marks a person with an excellent vocabulary is not that they spray the room with obscure words that get their listeners scrambling for the nearest dictionary, but rather that they use exactly the right word in exactly the right situation.

Now don't get me wrong - it is certainly true that a person who does this will often also know a bunch of really unusual words, but for the most part you only need to know a relatively small number of words to express yourself perfectly in most real world situations. The trick is to know these words inside out. You need to know them so well that they just come out of your mouth unconsciously as you try to express yourself.

How do you make this happen?

As always, there is no magic formula, but I've put together a few concrete strategies to improve vocabulary that I have found extremely effective. This list could easily extend to 100, of course, but I've tried to focus on the techniques I consider to be most effective and powerful.

You'll notice, for example, that I don't mention subscribing to Word of the Day services. Not because these services are bad or anything - it's just that they really don't do much to improve your vocabulary. (I'll talk more about daily word services another time.)
Create Vocabulary Lists
It is far easier to recall words that are grouped together into meaningful lists than to recall words that appear at random.

There are lots of useful themes you can use to compile vocabulary lists, but here are three I find useful...
Meanings — This is the most obvious way to categorize words and involves slotting each word into a topic the word is about. Examples I've used include Islamic Terms and Emotive Words.
Books — When I read a book and find myself looking up words on every second page, I'll compile a vocabulary list for that book.
Etymology — My most well-worn list in this category is Common Latin Words and PhrasesI'm sure you can think of other list headings that are more suitable for your own purposes. If you're preparing to sit a vocabulary exam, for example, you might have a list called GRE Exam - Masters Level.


Read Usage Examples
Read the following sentences and try to work out what the bolded word means (even if you think you know, read them anyway)...
"They are free to be energetic and enterprising; they are equally free to be lethargic and dilatory..."

"Some letters, however, suggest that Leapor was rather dilatory, and may not have done much work in the winter."

"they resorted to dilatory tactics, forcing a postponement of talks."

"This power may be used, for example, where there is likely to be a delay in allocating the case to a named guardian on the panel or where the guardian is being dilatory in appointing a solicitor."Did you guess that dilatory is an adjective describing someone who is a bit slow to act and/or given to procastination. I bet you did ;-)

See how powerful word usage examples are? They are so powerful that you could actually learn the meaning of words by reading a small collection of contextual uses without even looking up the word's definition!

In fact, if you think about it, that's how we do most of our vocabulary building in the world. We read and hear words in context and eventually work out what they mean without even trying to (as long as we hear them frequently enough).

Why not speed up the process by studying usage examples carefully and deliberately rather than waiting for examples to turn up in front of you. You will be amazed how much more quickly you can improve vocabulary this way, compared with normal reading.
Use Image Associations
Look at the following word and picture for a few seconds, and then close your eyes and try to erase the association...





Any luck? Of course not. You'll hear me say this time and time again on this site...

Your brain loves pictures. So use them!



If you look at this image 10 to 20 times, with the word CONTUMACIOUS right next to it each time, you will have no trouble recalling what this word means next time you see it in context.

There's a reason I chose this word for my example, by the way. Many people think images only work with concrete nouns, but here we have a perfect image to solidify an abstract adjective!

Sometimes you have to work pretty hard to come up with an image that conveys the sense of an unusual word, but if you really want to improve vocabulary, I assure you it's well worth the effort.
Use Vocabulary Software
There were plenty of people with great vocabularies on this planet before it was invaded by computers. You only need to read a literary classic to see that. So you certainly don't need computer software to become a master of words.

However, there is absolutely no doubt that software will help you improve vocabulary far more efficiently than pen-and-paper ever will. A good vocabulary building application enables you...
Search for words, meanings, and examples in a fraction of a second.
Test yourself using flashcards, without the messy card-stuffed shoeboxes!
Monitor your performance on the vocabulary lists you're trying to master.



I don't want to sidetrack this topic to discuss vocabulary building software in detail here, so let me just point you to the vocabulary builder I use nowadays.
Tips to Improve Vocabulary
Part II - Improve Vocabulary for Word Games

Ok, are you ready to graduate?

You see, words like DILATORY and CONTUMACIOUS are great for enriching your real world vocabulary, but they won't be enough to master Scrabble, Spelling Bees, or Crossword Puzzles. For that, you're going to need to bring in the heavy artillery...

Did you know that QIVIUT is wool taken from the undercoat of a musk ox? How about that UPSILON is the 20th letter of the Greek alphabet? No? Well, surely you know that GJETOST is a sweet Norwegian cheese made from goat's milk?

Collins Scrabble Dictionaries

Quote


"It's one thing to know how to play like an expert and quite another to do it all the time."
— Cecilia Le

Quote


"The game has luck, no doubt about it. It is up to the individual player to figure out how best to minimize the bad and maximize the good. Failing that, one can always blame their shortcomings on having a fuller, more interesting life than those who have done well in this game."
— Brian Cappelletto,

Qoute

Children are the most desirable opponents at scrabble as they are both easy to beat and fun to cheat.

Fran Lebowitz

Quote

Nobody will remember how many matches you won,but your behaviour will make lasting impression!!

By Tariq Pervez

Quote

Please don't say anyone to leave scrabble or stay away from it!!
Because "Scrabble is alcoholic an Scrabblers are addicted to it"

Solving Anagrams



Solving anagrams is a critical skill in Scrabble, Cryptic Crosswords, Text Twist, and an endless list of other word games and puzzles. It is also a lot of fun.

Whatever your particular motive for anagram-solving, this page should help. What I'm going to do here is describe three extremely useful techniques to improve your ability to unscramble anagrams quickly. These techniques were largely developed by expert Scrabble players, however I find the skills invaluable no matter what the anagramming context.
Solving Anagrams - Lesson 1
Prefixes and SuffixesMany words contain a common prefix or suffix. Given a jumbled set of letters, you can often make your job much easier by first removing two or more letters that form a possible prefix or suffix, and then anagramming the remaining set of letters.

Here's an example...

P-D-E-D-U-E-N



First, let's look for a common prefix, and we'll put it to one side. The first one that jumps out might be UN, giving us...

U-N + P-D-E-D-E



Do the letters PDEDE make a valid UN- word? None I can think of. Are there any other plausible prefixes here? Sure. Let's try UP...

U-P + D-E-D-E-N



Aha! DEDEN makes ENDED, giving...

UPENDED



See what I mean? By locating a common prefix we have reduced the difficult task of anagramming seven letters, to the easier task of anagramming five letters.

Here's another example...

D-U-A-T-H-O-N



Again, let's take out UN...

U-N + D-A-T-H-O



Hmmm... Nothing doing here. What about OUT...

O-U-T + D-A-H-N



OUT-HAND is obvious, but it isn't a word. Wait! What about...

HANDOUT



Bingo! Literally.

Just to see that you've got the idea, here's a harder one for you to practice. I'll put a spoiler near the bottom of the page for you...

N-O-F-L-O-U-S-P



Now, this is certainly a great technique for solving anagrams, but it isn't fool-proof. Why? Because lots of words, like EROTICA, for example, don't contain a common prefix or suffix. That's why we can't stop here...
Solving Anagrams - Lesson 2
AlphagramsNow here's a system that diehard Scrabble experts use in solving anagrams.

The alphagram of a word is simply a list of the word's letters in alphabetical order. Take the word WORDPLAY, for example. Listing the letters of this word in alphabetical order gives...

A-D-L-O-P-R-W-Y



So we call ADLOPRWY the alphagram of WORDPLAY. Pretty easy huh? But what's the point?

The point is this: alphagrams enable you to solve an anagram using your memory, rather than actually unscrambling letters. Let me give you an example...

Suppose you are trying to unscramble the letters UNMBAES. Now there are zillions of ways these letters might turn up in a word game:UNMBAES, BUMANES, NUMBESA, and so on. You can't possibly memorize every single one of these combinations.

But suppose you just memorize one of these zillions of patterns? Which one? The alphagram of course: ABEMNSU.

More to the point, suppose you memorize the rule...

ABEMNSU => SUNBEAM



Then, as soon as you are faced with the letters UNMBAES, you immediately rearrange them to form the alphagram ABEMNSU, and rely on your memory to return the solution of SUNBEAM.

Sound easy? It isn't! But...

The value of the method does not lie in the fact that it is easy, but rather that it reduces creative guesswork (that is, genuine anagramming) to mechanical work (memorized anagramming).

Lots of it, to be sure, but mechanical nonetheless. And if it's mechanical, then it's doable.

I can prove it's doable, because there are people out there in the word game community who can do this in their sleep. You can give one of these anagram experts just about any set of scrambled letters under nine letters or so in length, and they can find the anagram almost every time!

And so will you. Provided you do these two things...
Create a list of alphagrams of all the words you would like to be able to anagram
Memorize this list by going over and over and over it again. Use flash cards if you find them helpful (alphagram on one side - answer on the other)



After a lot of practice, it will become second nature to you. Given the letters GANTTASE, you will form the alphagram AAEGNSTT, and this will trigger your brain to recall the flash card on which you have the rule...

AAEGNSTT => STAGNATE



Given the power of this method, you might think that our work here is done. Not quite. There is one more thing we need to take care of...

Solving Anagrams - Lesson 3
Stories & PicturesSomething I haven't talked about yet is the possibility that a set of letters might have more than one anagram. When this happens, stories and pictures can be used to basically glue the answers together. That way, you only need to find one of the solutions, and the others will tag along.

TIP — Never underestimate the power of pictures in improving your recall. US memory champion Ron White achieves his freakish recall ability with a picture-based memory system.For example, the letters A-C-D-E-H-I-N have two solutions: CHAINEDand ECHIDNA. These answers can be glued together by simply imagining an ECHIDNA CHAINED to a lamppost. That way, once you've found the easier solution, CHAINED, the much trickier anagram will follow suit.



Likewise, TOENAIL is tricky to find from A-E-I-L-N-O-T, but it is an anagram of the easier-to-find ELATION, which has the common -IONending. So just imagine the ELATION you would feel if somebody pulled out your TOENAIL with a set of pliers! Sarcasm is fine in this game.

To finish off, I'll let you practice your final technique for solving anagrams by building a mental image around the anagram triplet...

BEDROOM - BOREDOM - BROOMED

Scrabble News



 
Avid players of Scrabble are never late to hear any news concerning their much-loved game. But for those who aren’t in the know, there are a couple of happenings in the world of Scrabble that you might be interested in finding out.

Back in 2010, there was a big hullabaloo over the news spreading worldwide that the rules of Scrabble will be changed for the first time in history. Mattel had announced that it would be allowing the use of proper nouns in the game which caused a big uproar among Scrabble purists who thought the classic game didn’t need changing at all. Thankfully, this wildfire of a rumor was doused when Mattel clarified that this change in rules will actually be done in a new type of Scrabble game they will be producing called Scrabble Trickster, something for the younger generations to enjoy. 

In 2011, there were yet again certain noises being made across Scrabble communities worldwide when the list of acceptable Scrabble words was changed to accommodate 3,000 new additions. These new words ranged from slang such as THANG and INNIT to new verbs like FACEBOOK and WEBZINE. Other additions include WAGYU and more Q words such as FIQH (related to Islamic sharia law) and QIN (Chinese zethir). However, the news turned out to be true only for countries outside of North America who use the Collins English Dictionary. USA and Canada uses the OWL or the Official Tournament and Club Word List which doesn’t have the additional 3,000 words. That is, for now. 

On another front in the Scrabble world, the highest total score in a Scrabble game held in a sanctioned Scrabble tournament is now 803; the record was set by Joel Sherman, a veteran Scrabble champion, in Dec. 9, 2011 when he defeated a former National Scrabble Champion, Bradley Robbins. It must be noted that the veteran champion is 49 years old while his defeated opponent is 14 years old, proving that Scrabble is a game for all ages.

And for those who love to play Scrabble on their iPhones and iPads, the game has a new update! With version 1.14.37, players can now enjoy several new features including a Game Center where they can see their games, how they rate against their friends, and even see the best scores in the Game Center leaderboards.

With so many things happening in the Scrabble world, it’s not surprising that this classic board game is still as addicting as ever.





Tuesday, 3 April 2012

6th ranking scrabble tournament of 2012


Ranking scrabble

KARACHI, Feb 6: The day-long 6th Ranking Scrabble Tournament was held at Beach Luxury Hotel here on Sunday.
Waseem Khatri staved off a strong challenge from Tariq Pervez to cling on to the top position by the skin of his teeth. Waseem won seven matches with a spread of 621 while Tariq Pervez also won seven matches but missed out on the top slot with a spread of 619. This was the narrowest of margins separating the top positions.
Meanwhile, Inayatullah finished third with six wins and a spread of 703. The star of the show, however, was 14-year-old Moizullah Baig.
Fresh from his win at the recent inter-school championship Moiz stunned everyone by beating several top-rated players including Waseem Khatri
.

7th ranking tournament of 2012


Tariq dethrones Khatri to win scrabble event

KARACHI, March 11: Tariq Pervez was in sizzling form at the seventh Ranking Scrabble Tournament played at Beach Luxury Hotel on Sunday.
Tariq dethroned the reigning champion Waseem Khatri by winning the tournament with seven wins and a spread of 531.
Waseem Khatri stood second with seven wins and a spread of 459.
Jawed Shamim made an impressive return to the game by clinching the third position with 6.5 wins and a spread of 223.
Twenty-five of the country’s finest players in the masters’ category competed in the event.

Inter-school Scrabble sets new attendance record in karachi,pakistan


Important Scrabble News


Two New Q (Without U) Words

A full English-language Scrabble tile set. See...
Image via Wikipedia
The official scrabble list of words has undergone another update to reflect the changing nature of language. The big news is that there are two new words using the letter Q that do not require U.
QIN (n): A Chinese zither, with strings stretched across a flat box. Scrabble score: 12
and
FIQH (n): An expansion of Islamic sharia law, based directly on the Koran and Sunnah. Scrabble score: 19

SCRABBLE


Scrabble
Scrabble United Kingdom.png
Scrabble brand logo by Mattel, Inc., used outside USA and Canada
Scrabble United States.png
Former Scrabble logo by Hasbro, Inc. used within USA and Canada, until March 2008
Manufacturer(s)Mattel (outside USA and Canada)
Hasbro (within USA and Canada)
Designer(s)Alfred Mosher Butts
Publisher(s)James Brunot
Publication date1948
Years active63
Genre(s)Word Game
Players2–4
Age range8+
Setup time2–6 minutes
Playing timeNASPA tournament game: ~50 minutes
Random chanceMedium (Letters Drawn)
Skill(s) requiredVocabularySpelling,AnagrammingStrategy,CountingBluffing
Scrabble is a word game in which two to four players score points by forming words from individual lettered tiles on a gameboard marked with a 15-by-15 grid. The words are formed across and down in crossword fashion and must appear in a standard dictionary. Official reference works (e.g., The Official Club and Tournament Word ListThe Official Scrabble Players Dictionary) provide a list of permissible words.
The name Scrabble is a trademark of Hasbro, Inc. in the United States and Canada. Elsewhere, Scrabble is trademarked by Mattel. The game is sold in 121 countries and there are 29 different language versions. Approximately 150 million sets have been sold worldwide, and sets are found in roughly one-third of American homes.[1][2][3]

history

Alfred Butts manually tabulated the frequency of letters in words of various length, using examples in a dictionary, theSaturday Evening Post, the New York Herald Tribune, and the New York Times. This was used to determine the number and scores of tiles in the game.
In 1938, American architect Alfred Mosher Butts created the game as a variation on an earlier word game he invented called Lexiko. The two games had the same set of letter tiles, whose distributions and point values Butts worked out meticulously performing a frequency analysis of letters from various sources including The New York Times. The new game, which he called "Criss-Crosswords," added the 15-by-15 gameboard and the crossword-style game play. He manufactured a few sets himself, but was not successful in selling the game to any major game manufacturers of the day.[4]
In 1948, James Brunot,[5] a resident of Newtown, Connecticut – and one of the few owners of the original Criss-Crosswords game – bought the rights to manufacture the game in exchange for granting Butts a royalty on every unit sold. Though he left most of the game (including the distribution of letters) unchanged, Brunot slightly rearranged the "premium" squares of the board and simplified the rules; he also changed the name of the game to "Scrabble," a real word which means "to scratch frantically." In 1949, Brunot and his family made sets in a converted former schoolhouse in Dodgingtown, a section of Newtown. They made 2,400 sets that year, but lost money.[6] According to legend, Scrabble's big break came in 1952 when Jack Straus, president ofMacy's, played the game on vacation. Upon returning from vacation, he was surprised to find that his store did not carry the game. He placed a large order and within a year, "everyone had to have one."[7] In 1952, unable to meet demand himself, Brunot sold manufacturing rights to Long Island-based Selchow and Righter (one of the manufacturers who, like Parker Brothers and Milton Bradley Company, had previously rejected the game). Selchow & Righter bought the trademark to the game in 1972.[8] JW Spears began selling the game in Australia and the UK on January 19, 1955. The company is now a subsidiary ofMattel, Inc.[4] In 1986, Selchow and Righter sold the game to Coleco, who soon after went bankrupt. The company's assets, including Scrabble andParcheesi, were purchased by Hasbro.[8]
In 1984, Scrabble was turned into a daytime game show on NBCScrabble ran from July 1984 to March 1990, with a second run from January to June 1993. The show was hosted by Chuck Woolery. The tagline of the show in promo broadcasts was, "Every man dies; not every man truly Scrabbles." In 2011, a new TV variation of Scrabble, called Scrabble Showdown, aired on The Hub cable channel, which is a is a joint venture of Discovery Communications, Inc. and Hasbro.
Scrabble was inducted into the National Toy Hall of Fame at The Strong in Rochester, New York, in 2004.

[edit]Game details

A full English-language tile set
The game is played by two to four players on a square (or nearly square) board with a 15-by-15 grid of cells (individually known as "squares"), each of which accommodates a single letter tile. In official club and tournament games, play is always between two players (or, occasionally, between two teams each of which collaborates on a single rack).
The board is marked with "premium" squares, which multiply the number of points awarded: eight dark red "triple-word" squares, 17 pink "double-word" squares, of which one, the center square (H8), is marked with a star or other symbol; 12 dark blue "triple-letter" squares, and 24 light blue "double-letter" squares. [In 2008, Hasbro changed the colors of the premium squares to orange for TW, red for DW, blue for DL, and green for TL. The original premium square color scheme is still the preferred scheme for Scrabble boards used in tournaments.[9]]
In an English-language set the game contains 100 tiles, 98 of which are marked with a letter and a point value ranging from 1 to 10. The number of points of each lettered tile is based on the letter's frequency in standard English writing; commonly used letters such as E or O are worth one point, while less common letters score higher, with Q and Z each worth 10 points. The game also has two blank tiles that are unmarked and carry no point value. The blank tiles can be used as substitutes for any letter; once laid on the board, however, the choice is fixed. Other language sets use different letter set distributions with different point values.
The official Scrabble board design
Key:
2×LS = Double letter score   3×LS= Triple letter score
2×WS / ★ = Double word score   3×WS = Triple word score

[edit]Notation system



In the notation system common in tournament play, columns are labeled with the letters "A-O" and rows with the numbers "1-15". (On Scrabble boards manufactured by Mattel as well as on the Internet Scrabble Club, rows are lettered while columns are numbered instead.) A play is usually identified in the format xy WORD score or WORD xy score, where x denotes the column or row on which the play's main word extends, y denotes the second coordinate of the main word's first letter, and WORD is the main word. Although unnecessary, additional words formed by the play are occasionally listed after the main word and a slash. In the case where the play of a single tile forms words in each direction, one of the words is arbitrarily chosen to serve as the main word for purposes of notation.
When a blank tile is employed in the main word, the letter it has been chosen to represent is indicated with a lower case letter, or, in handwritten notation, with a square around the letter. Parentheses are sometimes also used to designate a blank, although this may create confusion with a second (optional) function of parentheses, namely indication of an existing letter or word that has been "played through" by the main word.
Example:
  • A(D)DIT I ON(AL) D3 74
(played through the existing letter D and word AL, using a blank for the second I, extending down the D column and beginning on row 3, and scoring 74 points). When annotating, the play would be written A(D)DITiON(AL).
The parentheses can be omitted, though, if each play states how many tiles were laid on the board in that play.

[edit]Sequence of play

Before the game, a resource, either a word list or a dictionary, is selected for the purpose of adjudicating any challenges during the game. The letter tiles are either put in an opaque bag or placed face down on a flat surface. Opaque cloth bags and customized tiles are staples of clubs and tournaments, where games are rarely played without both.
A game of Scrabble in Tagalog
Next, players decide the order in which they play. The normal approach is for players to each draw one tile: The player who picks the letter closest to the beginning of the alphabet goes first, with the blank tiles taking precedence over A's. In North American tournaments, the rules of the US-based North American Scrabble Players Association (NASPA) stipulate instead that players who have gone first in the fewest number of previous games in the tournament go first, and when that rule yields a tie, those who have gone second the most go first. If there is still a tie, tiles are drawn as in the standard rules.
At the beginning of the game, and after each turn until the bag is empty (or until there are no more face-down tiles), players draw tiles to fill their "racks", or tile holders, with seven tiles, from which they will make plays. Each rack is concealed from the other players.
During a turn, a player will have seven or fewer letter tiles on their rack. On each turn, a player has three options:
  1. Pass, forfeiting the turn and scoring nothing
  2. Exchange one or more tiles for an equal number from the bag, scoring nothing, an option available only if at least seven tiles remain in the bag
  3. Play at least one tile on the board, adding the value of all words formed to the player's cumulative score
A proper play uses one or more of the player's tiles to form a contiguous string of letters that make a word (the play's "main word") on the board, reading either left-to-right or top-to-bottom. The main word must either use the letters of one or more previously played words or else have at least one of its tiles horizontally or vertically adjacent to an already played word. If words other than the main word are formed by the play, they are scored as well, and are subject to the same criteria of acceptability.
When the board is blank, the first word played must cover H8, the center square. The word must consist of at least two letters, extending horizontally or vertically. H8 is a premium square: the first player to play a word receives a double word score.
A blank tile may take the place of any letter. It then remains that letter for the rest of the game. It scores no points regardless of what letter it is designated or its placement on a premium square. But its placement on a double-word or triple-word square does cause the corresponding premium to be scored for the word in which it is used. While not allowed in official or tournament play, a common "house rule" allows players to "recycle" blank tiles by later substituting the corresponding letter tile.
After playing a word, the player announces the score for that play, then draws tiles from the bag to replenish their rack to seven tiles. If there are not enough tiles in the bag to do so, the player takes all the remaining tiles.
After a player plays a word, their opponent may choose to challenge any or all the words formed by the play. The player challenged must then look up the words in question, and if any one of them is found to be unacceptable, the play is removed from the board, the player returns the newly played tiles to their rack and the turn is forfeited. In tournament play, a challenge is to the entire play rather than any one word, and judges (human or computer) are used, so players are not entitled to know which word or words made a challenge succeed. Penalties for unsuccessfully challenging an acceptable play vary in club and tournament play, and are described in greater detail below.
Under North American rules, the game ends when (1) one player plays every tile on their rack, and there are no tiles remaining in the bag (regardless of the tiles on their opponent's rack); or (2) when six successive scoreless turns have occurred. (For several years, a game could not end with a cumulative score of 0-0, but that is no longer the case, and such games have since occurred a number of times in tournament play, the winner being the player with less total point value on their rack.[10])
When the game ends, each player's score is reduced by the sum of his/her unplayed letters. In addition, if a player has used all of his or her letters, the sum of the other player's unplayed letters is added to that player's score; in tournament play, a player who "goes out" adds twice that sum, and the opponent is not penalized.
Scoreless turns can occur when a player passes, when a player exchanges tiles, or when a player loses a challenge. The latter rule varies slightly in international tournaments.

[edit]Making a play

(Letters in parentheses indicate previously existing tiles)
The first played word must be at least two letters long, and cover H8 (the center square). Thereafter, any play using one or more tiles can be formed by
  • Adding one or more letters to an existing word, e.g. (JACK)S, HI(JACK), HI(JACK)ING.
  • "Hooking" a word(s) and playing perpendicular to that word(s), e.g. IONIZES with the S hooked on JACK to make (JACK)S.
  • Playing perpendicular to a word, e.g. JACK, then YEU(K)Y through the K.
  • Playing parallel to a word(s) forming several short words, e.g. JACK, then CON played under that to make (J)O and (A)N.
Any combination of these is allowed in a play, given that all the letters in each play lie on a straight line and are connected by a main word. Plays must read either left-right or top-bottom. Diagonal plays are not allowed.

[edit]Scoring

Premium square colors
SquareOriginal and Mattel versionCurrent Hasbro version
Double letterLight blueBlue
Triple letterDark blueGreen
Double wordPinkRed
Triple wordRedOrange
The score for any play is scored this way:
  • Each new word formed in a play is scored separately, and then those scores are added up. The value of each tile is indicated on the tile, and blank tiles are worth 0 points.
  • The main word (defined as the word containing every played letter) is scored. The letter values of the tiles are added up, and tiles placed on DLS and TLS are doubled and tripled in value, respectively. Tiles placed on DWS or TWS squares double or triple the value of the word(s) that include those tiles.
  • If any "hook" words are played (e.g. playing ANEROID while "hooking" the A to BETTING to make ABETTING), the scores for each word are added separately. This is common for "parallel" plays that make up to eight words in one turn.
  • Premium squares apply only when newly placed tiles cover them. Any subsequent plays do not count those premium squares.
  • If a player makes a play where the main word covers two DWS squares, the value of that word is doubled, then redoubled (i.e. 4× the word value). Similarly, if the main word covers two TWS squares, the value of that word is tripled, then retripled (9× the word value). Such plays are often referred to as "double-doubles" and "triple-triples" respectively. It is theoretically possible to achieve a play covering three TWS squares (a 27× word score), although this is extremely improbable without constructive setup and collaboration. Plays covering a DWS and a TWS simultaneously (18× the word value) are only possible if a player misses the center star on the first turn, and the play goes unchallenged (this is valid under North American tournament rules).
  • Finally, if seven tiles have been laid on the board in one turn (known as a "bingo" in North America, a "scrabble" in Spain, and a "bonus" elsewhere), after all of the words formed have been scored, 50 bonus points are added.
When the letters to be drawn have run out, the final play can often determine the winner. This is particularly the case in close games with more than two players.

[edit]Example

Suppose Player 1 plays QUANT 8D, with the Q on a DLS and T on the center star. The score for this play would be (2 × 10 + 1 + 1 + 1 + 1) × 2 = 48 (following the order of operations).
Player 2 extends the play to ALI(QUANT) 8A with the A on the TWS at 8A. The score for this play would be (1 + 1 + 1 + 10 + 1 + 1 + 1 + 1) × 3 = 51. Note that the Q is not doubled for this play.
Player 1 has DDIIIOO and plays OIDIOID 9G. The score for the word OIDIOID would be (2 × 1 + 1 + 2 × 2 + 1 + 1 + 1 + 2 × 2) = 14. Additionally, Player 1 formed NO and TI, which score 1 + 2 × 1 = 3 and 1 + 1 = 2 points respectively. Therefore the sum of all the values of the words formed is 14+3+2 = 19. However, this is a seven-letter play, so 50 points are added, resulting in a total score of 69. Player 1 now has a 117-51 lead.

[edit]Acceptable words

Acceptable words are the primary entries in some chosen dictionary, and all of their inflected forms. Words that are hyphenated, capitalized (such as proper nouns), or apostrophized are not allowed, unless they also appear as acceptable entries; JACK is a proper noun, but the word JACK is acceptable because it has other usages as a common noun (automotive, vexillological, etc.) and verb that are acceptable. Acronyms or abbreviations, other than those that have acceptable entries (such as AWOLRADARLASER, and SCUBA) are not allowed. Variant spellings, slang or offensive terms, archaic or obsolete terms, and specialized jargon words are allowed if they meet all other criteria for acceptability. Foreign words are not allowed in the English language Scrabble unless they have been incorporated into the English language – for example, the words PATISSERIE, KILIM, and QI.
Proper nouns and other exceptions to the usual rules are allowed in some limited contexts in the spin-off game Scrabble Trickster.
A near-ending game board, tiles and racks of the magnetic Pocket Scrabble (International, Mattel, Inc.)
There are two popular competition word lists used in various parts of the world: TWL and SOWPODS (also referred to as "Collins").

[edit]OWL2 and OSPD4

The North American 2006 Official Tournament and Club Word List, Second Edition (OWL2) went into official use in American, Canadian, Israeli and Thai club and tournament play on March 1, 2006 (or, for school use, the bowdlerized Official Scrabble Players Dictionary, Fourth Edition (OSPD4)). Early printings of OWL2 and OSPD4 have to be amended according to corrigenda posted at the National Scrabble Association web site. North American competitions use the Long Words List for longer words.
The OWL2 and the OSPD4 are compiled using four (originally five) major college-level dictionaries, including Merriam-Webster (10th and 11th editions, respectively). If a word appears, at least historically, in any one of the dictionaries, it will be included in the OWL2 and the OSPD4. If the word has only an offensive meaning, it is only included in the OWL2. The key difference between the OSPD4 and the OWL2 is that the OSPD4 is marketed for "home and school" use, with expurgated words which their source dictionaries judged offensive, rendering the Official Scrabble Players Dictionary less fit for official Scrabble play. The OSPD4 is available in bookstores, whereas the OWL2 is only available from the National Scrabble Association's retail websitewordgear.com (as of July 2009, NSA membership is no longer required to purchase the OWL).

[edit]Collins Scrabble Words

In all other countries, the competition word list is the Tournament and Club Word List (Collins), also known as Collins Scrabble Words. It was published in May 2007 (see SOWPODS) and it lists all words of length 2 to 15 letters and is thus a complete reference. This list contains all OWL2 words plus words sourced from Chambers and Collins English dictionaries. This book is used to adjudicate at the World Scrabble Championship and all other major international competitions outside of North America.
Collins Scrabble Words 2012 Edition will be used from 1 January 2012 for countries currently using the Tournament and Club Word List (Collins).[citation needed]

[edit]Challenges

The penalty for a successfully challenged play is nearly universal: the offending player removes the tiles played and forfeits the turn. (However, in some online games, an option known as "void" may be used, wherein unacceptable words are automatically rejected by the program. The player is then required to make another play, with no penalty applied.)
The penalty for an unsuccessful challenge (where all words formed by the play are deemed valid) varies considerably, including:
  • "Double Challenge", in which an unsuccessfully challenging player must forfeit the next turn. This penalty governs North American (NASPA-sanctioned) tournaments, and is the standard for North American, Israeli and Thai clubs. Because loss of a turn generally constitutes the greatest risk for an unsuccessful challenge, it provides the greatest incentive for a player to "bluff", or play a "phony" – a plausible word that they know or suspect to be unacceptable, hoping their opponent will not call them on it. Players have divergent opinions on this aspect of the double-challenge game and the ethics involved, but officially it is considered a valid part of the game.
  • "Single Challenge"/"Free Challenge", in which no penalty whatsoever is applied to a player who unsuccessfully challenges. This is the default rule in the United Kingdom and the Republic of Ireland, as well as for many tournaments in Australia, although these countries do sanction occasional tournaments using other challenge rules.
  • Modified "Single Challenge", in which an unsuccessful challenge does not result in the loss of the challenging player's turn, but is penalized by the loss of a specified number of points. The most common penalty is five points. The rule has been adopted in Singapore (since 2000), Malaysia (since 2002), South Africa (since 2003), New Zealand (since 2004), and Kenya, as well as in contemporary World Scrabble Championships (since 2001). Some countries and tournaments (including Sweden) use a 10-point penalty instead. In most game situations, this penalty is much lower than that of the "double challenge" rule. Consequently, such tournaments encourage a greater willingness to challenge and a lower willingness to play dubious words.
Under NASPA tournament rules, players may request to "hold" the play in order to consider challenging. If player A holds, player A's clock still runs, and player B may not draw replacement tiles until one minute after the hold was announced (in which those tiles must be kept separately). There is no time limit regarding how long player A holds a play.

[edit]Historic evolution of the rules

The North American "box rules" (that are included in each game box, as contrasted with tournament rules) have been edited four times: in 1953, 1976, 1989, and 1999.[11]
The major changes in 1953 were as follows:
  • It was made clear that:
    • words could be played through single letters already on the board.
    • a player could play a word parallel and immediately adjacent to an existing word provided all crosswords formed were valid.
    • the effect of two word premium squares were to be compounded multiplicatively.
  • The previously unspecified penalty for having one's play successfully challenged was stated: withdrawal of tiles and loss of turn.
The major changes in 1976 were as follows:
  • It was made clear that the blank tile beats an A when drawing to see who goes first.
  • A player could now pass his/her turn, doing nothing.
  • A loss-of-turn penalty was added for challenging an acceptable play.
  • If final scores are tied, the player whose score was highest before adjusting for unplayed tiles is the winner.
The editorial changes made in 1989 did not affect game play.
The major changes in 1999 were as follows:
  • It was made clear that:
    • a tile can be shifted or replaced until the play has been scored.
    • a challenge applies to all the words made in the given play.
  • Playing all seven tiles is officially called a "Bingo".
  • A change of wording could be inferred to mean that a player can form more than one word in one row on a turn.

[edit]Club and tournament play

Tens of thousands play club and tournament Scrabble worldwide. The intensity of play, obscurity of words, and stratospheric scores in tournament games may come as a shock to many parlor players. All tournament (and most club) games are played with a game clock and a set time control. Although casual games are often played with unlimited time, this is problematic in competitive play among players for whom the number of evident legal plays is immense. Almost all tournament games involve only 2 players; typically, each has 25 minutes in which to make all of his or her plays. For each minute by which a player oversteps the time control, a penalty of 10 points is assessed. The number of minutes is rounded up, so, for example, if a player oversteps time control by two minutes and five seconds, the penalty is 30 points. Also, most players use molded plastic tiles (of which Protiles is one major brand), not engraved like the original wooden tiles, eliminating the potential for a cheating player to "braille" (feel for particular tiles, especially blanks, in the bag).
Players are allowed "tracking sheets", preprinted with the letters in the initial pool, from which tiles can be crossed off as they are played. Tracking tiles is an important aid to strategy, especially during the endgame, when no tiles remain to be drawn and each player can determine exactly what is on the opponent's rack.
The most prestigious (regularly held) tournaments include:
  1. The World Scrabble Championship: held in odd years, the last was in WarsawPoland in 2011.[12]
  2. The National Scrabble Championship: an open event attracting several hundred players, held around July/August every year or two, most recently in Dallas, Texas in 2011.
  3. The Brand's Crossword Game King's Cup: the largest tournament in the World. Held annually around the end of June or beginning of July.
Other important tournaments include:
  1. The World Youth Scrabble Championships: entry by country qualification, restricted to under 18 years old. Held annually since 2006.
  2. The National School Scrabble Championship: entry open to North American school students. Held annually since 2003.
  3. The Canadian Scrabble Championship: entry by invitation only to the top fifty Canadian players. Held every two to three years.
Clubs in North America typically meet one day a week for three or four hours and some charge a small admission fee to cover their expenses and prizes. Clubs also typically hold at least one open tournament per year. Tournaments are usually held on weekends, and between six and nine games are played each day.
There are also clubs in the UK and many other countries. There are a number of internationally rated SOWPODS-tournaments.[13]
During off hours at tournaments, many players socialize by playing consultation (team) Scrabble, ClabbersAnagramsBoggle and other games.

[edit]Computer players

Maven is a computer opponent for the game, created by Brian Sheppard. The official Scrabble computer game in North America uses a version of Maven as its artificial intelligence and is published byAtari. Outside of North America, the official Scrabble computer game is published by Ubisoft. Quackle is an open-source alternative to Maven of comparable strength, created by a five-person team led by Jason Katz-Brown.[14]

[edit]Console and computer video game versions

Several computer and video game versions of Scrabble have been released for various platforms, including PCMacAmigaCommodore 64Sinclair ZX SpectrumGame BoyGame Boy ColorGame Boy AdvanceNintendo DSPlayStationPlayStation 2PlayStation PortableiPodiPadGame.comPalm OSAmstrad CPCXbox 360Kindle and mobile phones.
The Nintendo DS version of Scrabble 2007 Edition made news when parents became angry over the game's AI using potentially offensive language during gameplay.[15]

[edit]Scrabble on the Internet

A number of sites offer the possibility to play Scrabble online against other users. The game is available to play for free at www.pogo.com, part of Electronic Arts. The Internet Scrabble Club (ISC)www.isc.ro , which is free of charge, is frequented continuously by thousands of players, including many of the game's most renowned experts. The social networking site Facebook had offered an online variation of Scrabble called Scrabulous as a third-party application add-on. On January 15, 2008, it was reported that Hasbro and Mattel were in the process of suing the creators of Scrabulous for copyright infringement. On July 24, 2008, Hasbro filed a copyright infringement lawsuit against the creators of Scrabulous.[16] On July 28, 2008 the Scrabulous Facebook application was disabled for users in North America,[17] eventually re-appearing as "Lexulous" in September 2008, with changes made to distinguish it from Scrabble. On December 20, 2008 Hasbro withdrew their lawsuit against RJ Softwares.[18] There is also a version in Turkish as a Facebook application named "SKRABL Turkce" which offers only 2 player games.[19]
Mattel launched its official version of online Scrabble, Scrabble by Mattel on Facebook in late March 2008.[20][21] The application was developed by Gamehouse, a division of RealNetworks who has been licensed by Mattel.[21] However since Hasbro controls the copyright for North America with the copyright for the rest of the world belonging Mattel,[20] the Facebook application is available only to players outside the United States and Canada.[21] Ownership of the rights to Scrabble by multiple companies is limiting the introduction of the game to Facebook[21] and, between its launch date and April 6, 2008, fewer than 2000 users had registered, compared with 600,000 registered Scrabulous users.[21] As of November 3, 2008, the official Facebook Scrabble game has 203,644 monthly active users. The new "official" application has been heavily criticised in Facebook reviews, particularly by former users of the Scrabulous application which allowed American and Canadian users to play opponents in other countries, which is no longer possible: the Scrabble Beta application is only available in the USA and Canada, whereas Scrabble Worldwide is only available to other countries. Some have complained that they have been unable to use the new application due to technical bugs and glitches, and many have criticized Hasbro for failing to reach an agreement with Scrabulous developers.[22] In addition, the Facebook version only allows automatic verification of words, making it impossible to play invalid words, and making challenges superfluous.
RealNetworks has stated that the application is currently in its beta stage and there have been reports of a number of bugs and limitations.[21] The Original Scrabble now exists on Facebook, and was developed by Electronic Arts.

[edit]Scrabble "TV game show" board game versions

In 1987, a board game was released by Selchow & Righter, based on the Scrabble game show hosted by Chuck Woolery, which aired on NBC from 1984 to 1990 (and for five months in 1993). Billed as the "Official Home Version" of the game show (or officially as the "TV Scrabble Home Game"), game play bears more resemblance to the game show than it does to a traditional Scrabble game, although it does utilize a traditional Scrabble gameboard in play.
On September 17, 2011, a new game show based on Scrabble, called Scrabble Showdown, premiered on the The Hub. The show is hosted by Justin "Kredible" Willman.[23]

[edit]Super Scrabble

A new licensed product, Super Scrabble, was launched in North America by Winning Moves Games in 2004 under license from Hasbro, with the deluxe version (with turntable and lock-in grid) released in February 2007. A Mattel-licensed product for the rest of the world was released by Tinderbox Games in 2006. This set comprises 200 tiles in slightly modified distribution to the standard set and a 21×21 playing board.

[edit]Records

The following records were achieved during competitive club or tournament play, according to authoritative sources, including the book Everything Scrabble by Joe Edley and John D. Williams, Jr. (revised edition, Pocket Books, 2001) and the Scrabble FAQ.[24] When available, separate records are listed based upon different official word lists:
  1. OSPD or OTCWL, the North American list also used in Thailand and Israel;
  2. OSW, formerly the official list in the UK;
  3. SOWPODS, the combined OSPD+OSW now used in much of the world, known today as Collins Scrabble Words. To date, new editions or revisions of these lists have not been considered substantial enough to warrant separate record-keeping.
  • High game (OSPD) – 830 by Michael Cresta (Mass.), at the Lexington (Mass.) club, October 12, 2006. Cresta defeated Wayne Yorra 830-490.[25][26]
  • High game (OSPD) in a tournament game - 803 by Joel Sherman (N.Y.), at a tournament in Stamford, Conn., December 9, 2011. Sherman defeated Bradley Robbins 803-285. Sherman played seven bingoes in that game and stuck Robbins with the Q.[27]
  • High game (OSW) – 793 by Peter Preston (UK), 1999.[28]
  • High game (SOWPODS) – Toh Weibin set a record score of 850 at the Northern Ireland Championships on 21st January 2012. The winning margin of 591 points is also believed to be a record.[29]
  • High combined score (OSPD) – 1320 (830-490) by Michael Cresta and Wayne Yorra, in a Lexington, Mass., club, 2006.[25][26]
  • High combined score (OSPD) in a tournament game – 1134 (582-552) by Keith Smith (Tex.) and Stefan Rau (Conn.), Round 12 of the 2008 Dallas Open. (Rau's losing score of 552 included three phony words which were not challenged.)[30]
  • High combined score (OSPD) in a tournament game with no phony words played – 1127 (725-402) by Laurie Cohen (Ariz.) and Nigel Peltier (Wash.), in a tournament in Ahwatukee, Arizona, February 16, 2009.[31]
  • High combined score (SOWPODS) – 1157 (627-530) by Phillip Edwin-Mugisha (Uganda) and Vannitha Balasingam (Malaysia), at the 2009 World Scrabble Championship.[32]
  • Highest losing score (OSPD) – 552 by Stefan Rau (Conn.) to Keith Smith's (Tex.) 582, Round 12 of the 2008 Dallas Open.[30]
  • Highest tie game (OSPD) – 502-502 by John Chew and Zev Kaufman, at a 1997 Toronto Club tournament.[33]
  • Highest tie game (SOWPODS) – 522-522 by A Webb and N Deller, at the Peterborough Free Challenge Event 2009 [34]
  • Highest opening move score (OSPD) – MuZJIKS (with a blank for the U) 126 by Jesse Inman (S.C.) at the National Scrabble Championship, 2008.[35] The highest possible legal score on a first turn is MUZJIKS 128, using an actual U rather than a blank.
  • Highest opening move score (SOWPODS) – BEZIQUE 124 by Sam Kantimathi (1993),[36] Joan Rosenthal.[37] BEZIQUE 124 by Sally Martin.[37]
  • Highest single play (OSPD) – QUIXOTRY 365 by Michael Cresta (Mass.), 2006.[25][26]
  • Highest single play (SOWPODS) – CAZIQUES 392 by Karl Khoshnaw.[38]
  • Highest average score, multi-day tournament (OSPD) – 484 by Doug Brockmeier (N.Y.) over 12 rounds at Elmhurst, Ill., 2011.[39] 474 by Suhas Rao (N.C.) over 29 rounds at the 2011 National Scrabble Championship.[40] 471 by Chris Cree (Tex.) over 18 rounds at the Bayou Bash in Houston, Tex., 2007.[41]
  • Highest average score, multi-day tournament (SOWPODS) – 499.94 by Nigel Richards (MY) over 16 rounds at the 7th Lim Boon Heng Cup, Singapore, 2009.[42]
In the absence of better documentation, it is believed that the following records were achieved under a formerly popular British format known as the "high score rule", in which a player's tournament result is determined only by the player's own scores, and not by the differentials between that player's scores and the opponents'. As a result, play in this system "encourages elaborate setups often independently mined by the two players",[28] and is profoundly different from the standard game in which defensive considerations play a major role. While the "high score" rule has unsurprisingly led to impressively high records, it is currently out of favor throughout the world; associating its records with normal competitive play is misleading.
  • High game score of 1,049 by Phil Appleby of Lymington, HampshireUK, on June 25, 1989 in Wormley, Hertfordshire, UK. His opponent scored just 253 points, giving Appleby a record victory margin of 796 points.
  • High single-turn score of 392, by Dr. Saladin Karl Khoshnaw[38] in Manchester, UK, in April 1982. The word he used was CAZIQUES, meaning "native chiefs of West Indian aborigines".
Hypothetical scores in possible and legal but highly unlikely plays and games are far higher, primarily through the use of words that cover three triple-word-score squares. The highest reported score for a single play is 1780 (OSPD) and 1785 (SOWPODS) using oxyphenbutazone.[43] When only adding the word sesquioxidizing to these official lists, one could theoretically score 2015 (OSPD) and 2044 (SOWPODS) points in a single move.[43] The highest reported combined score for a theoretical game is 3,986 points using OSPD words only.[44][45]
In August 1984, Peter Finan and Neil Smith played Scrabble for 153 hours at St Anselms College, Birkenhead, Merseyside, setting a new duration record. A longer record was never recorded by Guinness Book of Records, as the publishers decided that duration records of this nature were becoming too dangerous, and stopped accepting them.[46]

[edit]International versions

Versions of the game have been released in several other languages.
The game was called Alfapet when it was introduced in Sweden in 1954. However, since the mid-1990s, the game has also been known as Scrabble in Sweden. Alfapet is now another crossword game, created by the owners of the name Alfapet. A Russian version is called Erudit. Versions have been prepared for DakotahHaitian CreoleDakelh (Carrier language), and Tuvan.[47]
For languages with digraphs counted as single letters, such as Welsh and Hungarian, the game features separate tiles for those digraphs.

[edit]Variations

Duplicate Scrabble is a popular variant in French speaking countries. Every player has the same letters on the same board and the players must submit a paper slip at the end of the allotted time (usually 3 minutes) with the highest scoring word they have found. This is the format used for the French World Scrabble Championships but it is also used in Romanian and Dutch. There is no limit to the number of players that can be involved in one game, and at Vichy in 1998 there were 1485 players, a record for French Scrabble tournaments.Variations of the game include AlphaJax, Literati, Alfapet, Funworder, Skip-A-Cross, Scramble, Spelofun, Square-write, Palabras Cruzadas ("crossed words"), Word for Word, Lexulous, Wordipelago, Wordfeud, and Words With Friends. While these games are similar to the original Scrabble game, they include minor variations. For example, Literati draws random tiles instead of providing a finite number of tiles for the game, assigns different point levels to each letter and has a slightly different board layout whereas Lexulous assigns eight letters to each player instead of the customary seven.
In one variation of Scrabble, blanks actually do score points corresponding to the letter which the blank is used to represent. For example, if one played blank to represent a "Z", it would get ten; a blank to represent a V or an H would get four; a blank to represent a D would get 2 and blank to represent a T, N, L, S or R or any of the vowels would get one.
A junior version, called "Junior Scrabble", has been marketed. This has slightly different distributions of frequencies of letter tiles to the standard Scrabble game.

[edit]Gameboard formats

The game has been released in numerous gameboard formats appealing to various user groups. The original boards included wood tiles and many "deluxe" sets still do.

[edit]Travel editions

Editions are available for travelers who may wish to play in a conveyance such as a train or plane, or who may wish to pause a game in progress and resume later. Many versions thus include methods to keep letters from moving, such as pegboards, recessed tile holders and magnetic tiles. Players' trays are also designed with stay-fast holders. Such boards are also typically designed to be re-oriented by each player to put the board upright during the game, as well as folded and stowed with the game in progress.
  • Production and Marketing Company, 1954 – metal hinged box, Bakelite tiles inlaid with round magnets, chrome tile racks, silver colored plastic bag and cardboard box covered with decorative paper. The box, when opened flat, measures 8½″ × 7¾″ and the tiles measure ½″ × ½″ each.
  • Spear's Games, 1980s – boxed edition with pegboard, plastic tiles with small feet to fit snugly in the pegboard. Racks are clear plastic, allowing some sorting while holding tiles fairly snugly. Set comes with a drawstring plastic bag to draw tiles and a cardboard box. It is possible to save a game in progress by returning the board to the box. There is risk of players' trays being mixed and upset, and the box lid, held on by friction, is subject to upset.
  • Selchow & Righter, 1980s – pocket edition with plastic "magnetic" board and tiles. Tile racks are also plastic with asymmetrical shape to provide handhold. All elements fit in a plastic envelope for travel and to permit a pause in the game. Plastic letters are very small and tend to lose their grip if not placed with slight lateral movement and if they are not perfectly clean. Game format is extremely small, allowing Scrabble games for backpackers and others concerned about weight and size.
  • Hasbro Games, 2001 – hinged plastic board with clear tile-shaped depressions to hold tiles in play. Board is in a black, zippered folio such that board and tiles may be folded for travel, even with game in play. Reverse side of board contains numbered mounts for racks, holding tiles face down, allowing secure and confidential storage of tiles while game is paused. Some versions have tile racks with individual tile slots, thus not permitting easy sorting of tiles in rack.

[edit]Deluxe editions

At the opposite end, some "deluxe" editions offer superior materials and features. These include editions on a rotating turntable so players can always face the board with the letters upright and a raised grid that holds the tiles in place. More serious players often favor custom Scrabble boards, often made of Lucite or hardwood, that have superior rotating mechanisms and personalized graphics.

[edit]Large print edition

An edition has been released (in association with the RNIB) with larger board and letters for players with impaired vision. The colours on the board are more contrasting and the font size is increased from 16 to 24 point. The tiles are in bold 48 point.