What are the different types of crossword puzzles?
"What is the five -letter word for?" How many times have we all heard this phrase, spoken in our lives fanatical crossword puzzles? We can even use this phrase ourselves if we also love crossword puzzles. Usually, the American style grid has no more than a sixth of their squares darkened and most of the letters are "checking" each other. This means getting most tracks in one direction (across or down) automatically adds words for the opposite direction. British and Australian crossword puzzles have a grid -style grid, with black squares placed so that only about half of the letters are checked. There are also concealed crossword puzzles that have courageous lines separating squares, rather than black. They started using them and enthusiasts began to create them in huge numbers. The puzzles of the crossword puzzles jumped on the pond in 1924 with their first performance in the UK. Nowadays, crossword puzzles are available in most newspapers, in some magazines and in the books of puzzles around the world.
The best known variation on the puzzle is a standard “quick” leash. These are simple traces with one -word answers. The shortcuts are also used as well as shortcuts and indirect traces.
The cryptic crossword, in which the traces of small puzzles themselves are the most common in the UK. Some puzzles are even written, so every answer is in a foreign language. There are also double crossword puzzles. These are puzzles designed so that a puzzle worker can either go through a list of simple tracks, or turn the page and use cryptic tracks, increasing the problems of puzzles, but allow either beginners or experts to work the same puzzle.
The cipher crossword has in the footsteps of the number and the puzzle must break the cipher code to read the tracks and solve the puzzle. One of the diabolical twists on the crossword is the British variation called a diagram puzzle. These puzzles include answering all tracks and then placed on a puardbad grid to check the answers correctly.
The new puzzle similar to the crossword is wildly popular sudoku. This includes the location of digits 1 to 9 in the grid in such a way that each row and each square 3 after 3 after 3 square content contains each of the numbers without repeating. As long as people want to play with words, the crossword puzzles will undoubtedly have a place in the list of favorite puzzles.