The Language Lover's Puzzle Book
Spiral-Bound | 2021-11-09
Alex Bellos
★★★★☆+
from Up to 30 ratings
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The Language Lover's Puzzle Book
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100 wonder-filled word puzzles that thrill and tantalize with the beauty, magic, and weirdness of world language
Whether you're a crossword solver, cryptogram fan, Scrabble addict, or Sudoku savant, The Language Lover's Puzzle Book is guaranteed to tease your brain and twist your tongue. Puzzle master Alex Bellos begins in Japan, where we can observe some curious counting:
boru niko = two balls tsuna nihon = two ropes uma nito = two horses kami nimai = two sheets of paper
ashi gohon = five legs ringo goko = five apples sara gomai = five plates kaba goto = five hippos
Now, how do the Japanese say "nine cucumbers"?* a) kyuri kyuhon b) kyuri kyuko c) kyuri kyuhiki d) kyuri kyuto
Bellos finds the intrigue--and the human element--in a dizzying array of ancient, modern, and even invented tongues, from hieroglyphs to Blissymbolics, Danish to Dothraki. Filled with unusual alphabets, fascinating characters, and intriguing local customs for time-telling, naming children, and more, this is a bravura book of brainteasers and beyond--it's a globe-trotting, time-traveling celebration of language.
*The word endings depend on shape: Flat things end in -mai and spherical things end in -ko. Cucumbers are long things (like ropes and legs), so they end in -hon. The answer is (a)!
Publisher: W. W. Norton
Original Binding: Paperback
Pages: 416 pages
ISBN-10: 1615198040
Item Weight: 1.1 lbs
Dimensions: 6.1 x 1.2 x 9.0 inches
Customer Reviews: 4 out of 5 stars Up to 30 ratings
"International Bestseller
"Alex Bellos is a dazzling polymath whose cleverness and ingenuity are on full display in this utterly brilliant and original collection of linguistic puzzles. This book is destined to be a classic for puzzle lovers." -Joshua Foer, cofounder of Atlas Obscura and author of Moonwalking with Einstein
Alex Bellos holds a degree in mathematics and philosophy from Oxford University. His bestselling books Here's Looking at Euclid and The Grapes of Math have been translated into more than 20 languages and were both shortlisted for the Royal Society Science Book prize. His puzzle books include Can You Solve My Problems?, Puzzle Ninja,Perilous Problems for Puzzle Lovers, and The Language Lover's Puzzle Book, and he is also the coauthor of the coloring books Patterns of the Universe and Visions of the Universe. He has launched an elliptical pool table, LOOP. He writes a popular-math blog and a puzzle blog for the Guardian, and he won the Association of British Science Writers award for best science blog in 2016. He lives in London.
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