The Canterbury Puzzles, and Other Curious ProblemsGood Press, 21 lis 2019 - 2500 Intellectual fun awaits in Henry Dudeney's work, 'The Canterbury Puzzles, and Other Curious Problems'. A world of mathematical puzzles inspired by the timeless tales of Geoffrey Chaucer's 'The Canterbury Tales' is one of the book's highlights. From challenging logic puzzles to whimsical brain teasers, this collection offers a symphony of perplexing enigmas to captivate and entertain. |
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... persons possessing only naturally alert faculties than by the better educated. The best players of such puzzle games ... person will keep to acrostics and other word puzzles, another to mathematical brain-rackers, another to chess ...
... persons possessing only naturally alert faculties than by the better educated. The best players of such puzzle games ... person will keep to acrostics and other word puzzles, another to mathematical brain-rackers, another to chess ...
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... person, equally clever, cannot invent one "to save his life," as we say. The explanation is very simple. The expert knows an idea when he sees one, and is able by long experience to judge of its value. Fertility, like facility, comes by ...
... person, equally clever, cannot invent one "to save his life," as we say. The explanation is very simple. The expert knows an idea when he sees one, and is able by long experience to judge of its value. Fertility, like facility, comes by ...
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... person who was either very clever or very foolish (I have never quite determined which) claimed to have solved it in only one straight line, because, as she said, "I have taken care to make all the others crooked!" Who could have ...
... person who was either very clever or very foolish (I have never quite determined which) claimed to have solved it in only one straight line, because, as she said, "I have taken care to make all the others crooked!" Who could have ...
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... persons , directly the would - be solver fails to master the difficulty he boldly introduces a rope to pull the boat across . You say that a rope is forbidden ; and he then falls back on the use of a current in the stream . I once ...
... persons , directly the would - be solver fails to master the difficulty he boldly introduces a rope to pull the boat across . You say that a rope is forbidden ; and he then falls back on the use of a current in the stream . I once ...
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... person will at once suggest that we might take our diagonal first, say an exact foot, and then construct our square. Yes, you can do this, but then you can never say exactly what is the length of the side. You can have it which way you ...
... person will at once suggest that we might take our diagonal first, say an exact foot, and then construct our square. Yes, you can do this, but then you can never say exactly what is the length of the side. You can have it which way you ...
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THE CANTERBURY PUZZLES & OTHER CURIOUS PROBLEMS: A Mathematical Puzzle Book Henry Ernest Dudeney Ograniczony podgląd - 2017 |
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Abbot amusement arranged asked bottles castle Chaucer cheeses chess problems chessboard club contain corner correct answer count course cubes curious diagonal diagram digital root divided divisors doth dungeon easy eight eleven equal exactly feet fewest possible moves figures five footprints four pieces Friar frogs geese give Hawkhurst illustration inches kayle-pins Kayles kissed lady length letters little puzzle magic square Marksford matter Melville merry monks multiplied Mystery never night nine once perfect square perplexed pilgrims pint play player poser problem propounded pudding Puzzle Club Ramsgate Ravensdene reader recurring decimals riddle Riddlewell rings round route shown side simple Sir Hugh sixty-four smallest possible number snail solution Solvamhall solve Sompnour Squire's stools straight line Tabard Table of Contents tell thereof thing thou twelve Victor Hirtzler Wife of Bath wine withal words