Dictionary Definition
boggle
Verb
1 startle with amazement or fear
2 hesitate when confronted with a problem, or
when in doubt or fear
3 overcome with amazement; "This boggles the
mind!" [syn: flabbergast, bowl
over]
User Contributed Dictionary
see Boggle
English
Pronunciation
- Rhymes: -ɒɡəl
Verb
Extensive Definition
Boggle is a word game
designed by Allan Turoff
and trademarked by Parker
Brothers and Hasbro. The game is
played using a grid of lettered dice, in which players attempt to
find words in sequences of adjacent letters.
Rules
The game begins by shaking a covered tray of
sixteen cubic dice. Each
die has a different letter printed on each of its sides. The dice
settle into a four by four tray so that only the top letter of each
cube is visible. After they have settled into the grid, a
three-minute timer is started and all players simultaneously begin
the main phase of play.
Each player searches for words that can be constructed from
the letters of sequentially adjacent cubes, where "adjacent" cubes
are those horizontally, vertically or diagonally neighboring. Words
must be at least three letters long, may include singular and
plural (or other derived forms) separately, but may not use the
same letter cube more than once per word. Each player records all
the words he or she finds by writing on a private sheet of paper.
After three minutes have elapsed, all players must stop writing and
the game enters the scoring phase.
In the scoring phase, each player reads off his
or her list of discovered words. If two or more players wrote the
same word, it is removed from all players' lists. Any player may
challenge the validity of a word, in which case a previously
nominated dictionary
is used to verify or refute it. For all words remaining after
duplicates have been eliminated, points are awarded based on the
length of the word. The winner is the player whose point total is
highest, with any ties typically broken by count of long
words.
One cube is printed with Qu. This is because Q is
virtually always followed by U in English words (see
exceptions), and if there were a Q in Boggle, it would be
unusable if a U did not, by chance, appear next to it. For the
purposes of scoring Qu counts as two letters: squid would score two
points (for a five-letter word) despite being formed from a chain
of only four cubes.
The North American
National Scrabble Association publishes the
Official Scrabble Players Dictionary (OSPD), which is also
suitable for Boggle. This dictionary includes all variant forms of
words up to eight letters in length. A puzzle book entitled 100
Boggle Puzzles (Improve Your Game) offering 100 game positions was
published in the UK in 2003
but is no longer in print.
Different versions of Boggle have varying
distributions of letters. For example, a more modern version (with
a blue box) in the UK has easier letters, such as only one "K", but
an older version (with a yellow box, from 1986) has two "K"s and a
generally more awkward letter distribution.
Boggle game variants
Numerous computer versions and variants of the game are available for play on the web and for download. Additionally, Parker Brothers has introduced several licensed variations on the game. As of 2006, only Boggle Junior and Travel Boggle (also marketed as Boggle Folio), continue to be manufactured and marketed in North America alongside the standard Boggle game. Boggle Junior is a much simplified version intended for young children. Boggle Travel is a car-friendly version of the standard 4×4 set. The compact, zippered case includes pencils and small pads of paper, as well as an electronic timer, and notably, a cover made from a soft plastic that produces much less noise when the board is shaken.Big Boggle, later marketed as Boggle Master and
Boggle Deluxe, was arguably the most commercially successful
obsolete Boggle variant introduced by Parker Brothers. It featured
a 5×5 tray, and disallowed 3-letter words. Some editions
of the Big Boggle set included an adapter which could convert the
larger grid into a standard 4×4 Boggle grid. In the
United
Kingdom, Hasbro UK currently markets Super Boggle, which
features both the 4x4 and 5x5 grid and an electronic timer which
flashes to indicate the start and finish. Despite the game's
popularity in North America, no version of Boggle offering a 5x5
grid is currently marketed outside Europe.
Other obsolete Boggle variants include:
- A version of the standard 4×4 set that included a special red "Boggle challenge cube", featuring six relatively uncommon letters. Bonus points are awarded for all words making use of the red cube.
- Boggle CDROM, a version for Windows, produced and marketed by Hasbro Interactive, including both 4X4 and 5X5 versions, several 3-D versions, and facilities allowing up to four players to compete directly over the Internet.
- Body Boggle, which is more akin to Twister than it is to standard Boggle. Two players work together as a team, using their hands and feet to spell words on a large floor mat containing pre-printed Boggle letters.
- Boggle Bowl, which is somewhat similar to Scrabble in that players must form words by placing letter tiles onto a (bowl-shaped) playing area.
- Boggle was once an interactive TV game show hosted by game show veteran Wink Martindale, that aired on The Family Channel (now ABC Family) replacing the interactive version of Trivial Pursuit.
- Coggle, which functions in a similar manner to Boggle but involves creating a word to fit a particular theme. Was mainly aimed at the French and Canadian market.
In the Philippines, a
similar game which was first distributed in 1978 and is still in
circulation up to the present is the game "Word Factory." The game
was first patented in the Philippines, and is currently being
manufactured and distributed to selected retailers by the
Philippines-based game manufacturer, 13 P.M. Enterprises. Word Factory was
a variation on the version of Boggle as it existed in 1978: using a
5x5 grid instead of a 4x4 one, and using plastic dice instead of
wooden ones. At present, the game is being marketed to other
countries, targeting mostly migrant Filipino
families.
Club and tournament play
While not as widely institutionally established as Scrabble, several clubs have been established for the purpose of organizing Boggle play. Official Boggle clubs exist at a number of educational institutions, including the Dartmouth Union of Bogglers at Dartmouth College , the Western Oregon University Boggle Club , the University of Michigan Boggle Club , University of Delaware Boggle Club , Berkeley Boggle Club at the University of California, Berkeley, and Grinnell College Boggle Club .Unlike Scrabble, there is no national or
international governing or rule-making body for Boggle competition
and no official tournament regulations exist.
Boggle In The Media
- On episode 159 of Seinfeld ("The Serenity Now"), Elaine gives a Boggle set as a Bar Mitzvah present.
- On episode 2.22 of Friends, called 'The one with the Two Parties', Monica Geller is laughed at by Joey Tribbiani and Chandler Bing when she asks them for silence and explains that she is trying to start a Boggle Tournament in her apartment as a part of Rachel's birthday party.
- On the King of the Hill, Boggle is a favorite activity of Peggy Hill. In the episode Peggy the Boggle Champ, she represents Arlen in the Texas State Boggle Championships (there are no official state or national Boggle championships in real life). In another episode, Death and Texas, Peggy unknowingly sneaks cocaine in the sand timer to a prison inmate with whom she plays Boggle.
- Adrock of the Beastie Boys mentions the game in the song "Putting Shame In Your Game," declaring: "I'm the King of Boggle there is none higher, I gets eleven points off the word quagmire".
- On the album The Mouse and the Mask, the game is mentioned in the song "Mince Meat", as Daniel Dumile raps: "A true nerd who messed with new words since Boggle and used slang in Scrabble".
- On the pilot episode of The Big Bang Theory the main characters refer to the game by telling Penny that they enjoy Klingon Boggle, that is the same as regular Boggle but in Klingon.
- Comedian Josie Long often has a live Boggle tournament as part of her act. At the Latitude Festival in 2007, she painted a Boggle grid onto the side of a live horse.
Trivia
- Using the sixteen cubes in a standard Boggle set, the list of longest words that can be formed includes Inconsequentially, Quadricentennials, and Sesquicentennials, all seventeen letter words made possible by Q and U appearing on the same face of one cube.http://people.virginia.edu/~mje6t/boggle/longest.html
External links
boggle in German: Boggle
boggle in French: Boggle
boggle in Finnish: Boggle
Synonyms, Antonyms and Related Words
addle,
amaze, around the bush,
astonish, astound, awe, awestrike, back out, bad job,
baffle, balk, bamboozle, bashfulness, be all thumbs,
beat, beat about, bedaze, bedazzle, beef, beg the question, bevue, bewilder, bicker, bitch, blench, blow, blunder, blunder away, blunder
into, blunder on, blunder upon, bobble, boggling, bollix, bonehead play, boner, boo-boo, botch, bowl down, bowl over,
boycott, buffalo, bumble, bungle, butcher, call in question,
cavil, challenge, chicken, chicken out, choplogic, clumsy performance,
cobble, commit a gaffe,
complain, compunction, confound, cry out against,
daze, dazzle, demonstrate, demonstrate
against, demur, demurral, desert under fire,
diffidence, dispute, dodge, dumbfound, dumbfounder, enter a
protest, equivocate,
error, etourderie, evade, evade the issue, expostulate, falter, faltering, faux pas, fence, fight shy, fight shy of,
flabbergast,
flinch, floor, flounder, flub, fluff, foozle, fuddle, fumble, funk, funk out, gag, gaucherie, get, get cold feet, goof up, gum up,
hang back, hang off, hash,
have qualms, have two minds, hedge, hesitance, hesitancy, hesitate, hesitation, hold off,
holler, howl, jib, jump, jump a mile, keep in
suspense, kick, lick, lose courage, louse up,
lumber, make bones about,
mar, march, maze, mess, miscue, mistake, modesty, muddle, muff, murder, mystify, nitpick, nonplus, object, objection, obscure, off day, overwhelm, palter, panic, paralyze, parry, pause, perplex, petrify, pick nits, picket, play havoc with, press
objections, prevaricate, protest, pull back, pussyfoot, puzzle, quail, qualm, qualm of conscience,
qualmishness,
quibble, raise a howl,
rally, recoil, remonstrate, sad work,
scruple, scrupulosity, scrupulousness, scuttle, shift, shrink, shrinking, shuffle, shy, shy at, shyness, sidestep, sit in, skedaddle, slip, split hairs, spoil, squawk, stagger, stampede, start, start aside, startle, state a grievance,
stick, stick at, stickle, stickling, strain, strike, strike dead, strike dumb,
strike with wonder, stumble, stump, stun, stupefy, surprise, teach in, tergiversate, throw, trip, waver, wince, yell bloody
murder