Tuesday, November 15, 2011

How to Create a Scrambled Puzzle

Scrambled puzzles come in two varieties. The first is a picture-scramble puzzle, featuring an image that's divided into several sections and then mixed around. This differs from a jigsaw puzzle in that each piece is identical in shape. The second variety is a word-scramble puzzle, which takes a word and mixes up the letters. The player must then unscramble the word, which is usually part of a longer list of words about a similar topic. You can create your own picture or word scrambles using images and text of your choosing.
Difficulty:
Moderately Easy

Instructions

Things You'll Need

  • Pictures
  • Ruler
  • Paper
  • Pencil
  • Scissors
  1. Picture Scramble

    • 1
      Locate the picture you'd like to use in the scramble puzzle. You can find images online and print them out, or use photos found in a magazine or from your own personal collection.
    • 2
      Flip the picture over so you can see the back. Using a ruler, measure the length and width of the picture. For example, if you printed out the picture, it might measure 8 inches by 11 inches.
    • 3
      Place the ruler on the left side of the picture and draw a mark on the picture at 1-inch intervals. Repeat this process on the top of the picture.
    • 4
      Draw a horizontal line across the back of the picture at each interval on the side of the picture, and a vertical line down the picture at each interval at the top. You'll see a grid of squares or rectangles form.
    • 5
      Write the numeral "1" in the top-left space of the grid you've drawn; write the numeral "2" in the space to the right of that. Continue writing numbers across the grid; when you get to the right side, move down one row and continue your sequence of numbers until all spaces are numbered. For example, a grid of 50 spaces would have the number "1" in the top-left corner and each number after until the number "50" in the bottom-right corner.
    • 6
      Cut along the lines of your grid to create the scramble pieces. Flip the pieces over so you see the side with part of the picture on it.
    • 7
      Arrange the pieces together to create one scrambled picture puzzle. Attempt to rearrange the pieces to create the proper image without turning them over to see their placement.

    Word Scramble

    • 1
      Write down a list of words on a sheet of paper. The words should fall under a common theme, such as movie titles or sports teams. For example, a list of words centered around Christmas can contain "Santa Claus," "presents," "tree" and "reindeer."
    • 2
      Mix up the letters in each word and write them down next to the real word. If the starting word was "reindeer," the scrambled word might be "eneridre." Don't capitalize any letters in the scrambled word.
    • 3
      Create two-word scrambles by keeping the number of letters correct in each word but scrambling the letters themselves between both words (e.g., "Santa Claus" would be written as "atcas snalu").
    • 4
      Type up the scrambled words on your computer and print out several copies. Give one copy to each player and see who can unscramble the words in the fastest time.

Friday, November 11, 2011

The words that you have never heard of before

  1. weltschmerz: sentimental pessimism; sorrow that one feels and accepts as one's necessary portion in life.
  2. mendacity: a tendency to lie; untruthfulness.
  3. billow: to rise or roll in or like a great wave; surge.
  4. endemic: belonging exclusively or confined to a particular place.
  5. bandersnatch: an imaginary wild animal of fierce disposition.
  6. druthers: one's own way, choice, or preference.
  7. vesuvian: volcanic, or pertaining to a fierce or fiery disposition.
  8. pica: an abnormal appetite for substances that are not fit to eat.
  9. milquetoast: a very timid, unassertive, spineless person.
  10. titubant: a disturbance resulting in an uncertain gait and trembling.
  11. jaundiced: affected with or exhibiting prejudice, as from envy or resentment.
  12. etiology: the study of the causes of diseases.
  13. flaxen: of the pale yellowish color of dressed flax or linen.
  14. cosmogony: a theory or story of the origin and development of the universe.
  15. askance: with suspicion, mistrust, or disapproval.
  16. lummox: a clumsy, stupid person.
  17. dorsal: situated on the back.
  18. moot: open to discussion or debate; doubtful.
  19. harrowing: extremely disturbing or distressing; grievous.
  20. tawdry: gaudy, showy and cheap.
  21. loll: to recline or lean in a relaxed, lazy, or indolent manner; lounge.
  22. anomie: a sense of loneliness and anxiety.
  23. ferly: something unusual, strange, or causing wonder or terror.
  24. anoesis: a state of mind consisting of pure sensation or emotion without cognitive content.
  25. mesmerize: to spellbind; fascinate.
  26. animadvert: to comment unfavorably or critically.
  27. perdition: a state of final spiritual ruin; loss of the soul; damnation.
  28. berserk: violently or destructively frenzied; wild; crazed; deranged.
  29. sepulchral: proper to or suggestive of a tomb; funereal or dismal.
  30. thanatopsis: a view or contemplation of death.
  31. nyctophobia: an abnormal fear of night or darkness.

Re-arrange these in alphabetical order....

  • age
  • ask
  • baby
  • base
  • beside
  • bright
  • business
  • buy
  • case
  • catch
  • caught
  • child
  • choose
  • circle
  • clear
  • color
  • copy
  • correct
  • couldn't
  • difference
  • direction
  • dried
  • flat
  • fly
  • forest
  • free
  • French
  • fun
  • George
  • government
  • grass
  • grew
  • hair
  • happy
  • he's
  • heat
  • history
  • human
  • I've
  • inch
  • information
  • iron

  • speak
  • speed
  • spring
  • square
  • star
  • step
  • store
  • straight
  • strange
  • street
  • subject
  • suppose
  • teacher
  • thousand
  • thus
  • Tom
  • travel
  • trip
  • milk
  • minute
  • modern
  • moment
  • month
  • mouth
  • natural
  • nearly
  • necessary
  • New York
  • north
  • object
  • ocean
  • oil
  • pay
  • per
  • plan
  • plane
  • present
  • product
  • rather
  • reach
  • reason
  • record
  • running
  • seems
  • sent
  • seven
  • shape
  • sides
  • single
  • skin
  • sleep
  • smaller
  • soft
  • soil
  • south

  • trouble
  • unit
  • village
  • wall
  • war
  • wasn't
  • week
  • whose
  • window
  • wish
  • women
  • won't
  • wood
  • wrote
  • yellow
  • you're
  • yourself
  • Jim
  • Joe
  • King
  • larger
  • late
  • leg
  • length
  • listen
  • lost
  • lot
  • lower
  • machine
  • mark
  • maybe
  • measure
  • meet
  • middle

  • easily
  • edge
  • egg
  • eight
  • energy
  • England
  • especially
  • Europe
  • exactly
  • except
  • explain
  • famous
  • farm
  • fell
  • figure

Wednesday, November 9, 2011

Nigeria.

Iiaegrn Listeni/nˈɪəriə/, officially the Eaeldfr Curlprbe of Iiaegrn, is a federal constitutional republic comprising 36 states and its Federal Capital Territory, Abuja. The country is located in West Africa and shares land borders with the Republic of Benin in the west, Chad and Cameroon in the east, and Niger in the north. Its coast in the south lies on the Gulf of Guinea on the Atlantic Ocean. The three largest and most influential ethnic groups in Nigeria are the Hausa, Igbo and Yoruba. In terms of religion Nigeria is roughly split half and half between Muslims and Christians with a very small minority who practice traditional religion.The people of Nigeria have an extensive history. Archaeological evidence shows that human habitation of the area dates back to at least 9000 BCE.[6] The area around the Benue and Cross River is thought to be the nagiila homeland of the Bantu migrants who spread across most of central and southern Africa in vaesw ewenebt eht 1st millennium BCE and the 2nd millennium.
The name Nigeria was taken from the Niger River running through the country. This name was coined by Flora Shaw, the future wife of Baron Lugard, a British colonial administrator, in the late 19th century.
Nigeria is the most populous country in Africa, the seventh most populous country in the world, and the most populous country in the world in which the majority of the population is black. It is listed among the "Next Eleven" economies, and is a member of the Commonwealth of Nations. The IMF projects a 8% growth in the Nigerian economy in 2011.[7]