Search for crossword answers and clues
A Chinese puzzle consisting of a square divided into seven pieces that must be arranged to match particular designs
Answer for the clue "A Chinese puzzle consisting of a square divided into seven pieces that must be arranged to match particular designs ", 7 letters:
tangram
Alternative clues for the word tangram
Word definitions for tangram in dictionaries
Wikipedia
Word definitions in Wikipedia
Tangram is a dissection puzzle. Tangram may refer to: Tangram, Nepal , a village in Nepal Tangram (album) , a 1980 album by Tangerine Dream
Wiktionary
Word definitions in Wiktionary
n. A Chinese puzzle made of a square that is cut up into different triangular pieces which can then be reassembled to make designs.
Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
Word definitions in Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
Chinese geometric puzzle, 1864, said to be an arbitrary formation based on anagram, etc. First element perhaps Chinese t'an "to extend," or t'ang , commonly used in Cantonese for "Chinese." Some suggest it is the name of the inventor, "but no such person ...
WordNet
Word definitions in WordNet
n. a Chinese puzzle consisting of a square divided into seven pieces that must be arranged to match particular designs
Usage examples of tangram.
The Captain had been challenged to make the tangram into an albatross, a puzzle that might have been fairly simple for him had he not been under a time constraint of sixty-seven foot thumps.
The floor of the tavern shook with the stamping, as did the table on which the Captain was endeavoring to sort out the tangram, causing the puzzle to jiggle violently and throwing off his concentration.
Leaving his room brusquely, to take this revelation away and try to fit it into the hectic tangram of recent events, she had hardly reached the newel at the stairhead when she heard a crash.
This is not the case with Tangrams, a recreation that appears to be at least four thousand years old, that has apparently never been dormant, and that has not been altered or "improved upon" since the legendary Chinaman Tan first cut out the seven pieces shown in Diagram I.
This gentleman, it is said, records that there were originally seven books of Tangrams, compiled in China two thousand years before the Christian era.
If you place your Tangrams together on white paper so that they do not quite touch one another, in some cases the effect is improved by the white lines.