A specimen of the order-six square (or 6-square) was first published in English in 1859; the 7-square in 1877; the 8-square in 1884; the 9-square in 1897; and the 10-square in 2023. Here are examples of English word squares up to order eight: The following is one of several "perfect" nine-squares in English (all words in major dictionaries, uncapitalized, and unpunctuated):
Order 10 squares A 10-square is naturally much harder to find, and a "perfect" 10-square in English has been hunted since 1897. The solution, which effectively eliminates the use of capitalized and punctuated words, consists of five binary nomenclature
epithets of species names, a term for a type of inorganic compound, a name for a precursor form of an organic compound, as well as a rarely used word, an obsolete word and a standard English word, with the newest word having been introduced in 2011. Additionally, various methods have produced
partial results to the 10-square problem: ;Tautonyms Since 1921, 10-squares have been constructed from
reduplicated words and phrases like "Alala! Alala!" (a reduplicated Greek interjection). Each such square contains five words appearing twice, which in effect constitutes four identical 5-squares. Darryl Francis and Dmitri Borgmann succeeded in using near-tautonyms (second- and third-order reduplication) to employ seven different entries by pairing "
orangutang" with "urangutang" and "ranga-ranga" with "tanga-tanga", as follows: However, "word researchers have always regarded the tautonymic ten-square as an unsatisfactory solution to the problem." There are a few "imperfections": "
Echeneidae" is capitalized, "Dioumabana" and "Adaletabat" are places (in
Guinea and
Turkey respectively), and "nature-name" is hyphenated. Many new large word squares and new species have arisen recently. However, modern combinatorics has demonstrated why the 10-square has taken so long to find, and why 11-squares are extremely unlikely to be constructible using English words (even including transliterated place names). However, 11-squares are possible if words from a number of languages are allowed (
Word Ways, August 2004 and May 2005). ==Other languages==