Join us on a literary world trip!
Add this book to bookshelf
Grey
Write a new comment Default profile 50px
Grey
Subscribe to read the full book or read the first pages for free!
All characters reduced
Wicked Wee Words - For Competitive Word Games - cover

We are sorry! The publisher (or author) gave us the instruction to take down this book from our catalog. But please don't worry, you still have more than 500,000 other books you can enjoy!

Wicked Wee Words - For Competitive Word Games

Sheila John

Publisher: AuthorHouse UK

  • 0
  • 0
  • 0

Summary

This book lists small unusual words, mostly with high scoring letters. Beginners find it useful to add on to existing words in the game and competitive players can only increase their score.
The words are listed by the key letter, alphabetically, so that where the key letter is not the first letter it is included in that section. The book is easy to read and can be used while playing learning and casual games.
Once a Wicked Wee Word is used, it is always remembered!
Available since: 06/16/2006.

Other books that might interest you

  • Strays - cover

    Strays

    Remy Wilkins

    • 0
    • 0
    • 0
    Rodney, abandoned by his mother at his weird uncle Ray's, encounters a demon named Birthless and must figure out his uncle's secret while preserving himself, his newfound friends, and a sleepy Alabama town from destruction. Strays is an unusual YA adventure story that's part C.S. Lewis's Screwtape Letters and part Tom Sawyer. The focus of the book isn't on simple lessons, but is instead the story of a lonely boy realizing that there is more to the heavens than stars, more to books than facts, and more to his Uncle Ray than tie-dye shirts and honeybees.
    Show book
  • Tarantulas - cover

    Tarantulas

    Kari Schuetz

    • 0
    • 0
    • 0
    Packed with less of a punch than a tiny honeybee, tarantula bites are merely harmless to humans. Their large, fuzzy bodies and legs send some squirming, but these bugs are misunderstood. Get educated on the life of these spiders in this title that will have emergent readers crawling for more!
    Show book
  • Ready or Not - cover

    Ready or Not

    Tracy Darnton

    • 0
    • 0
    • 0
    Shared family holidays at Creek House have been the backdrop to Millie's summers since forever. Hanging out with the other kids – Matt, Charlie, Jem and her best friend Kat – has made it her favourite time of the year.
    But this holiday things are different – the childhood games that once filled their days have lost their appeal to everyone except Millie. It's not until the final night that the others agree to a game of hide and seek. But in the time it takes Millie to count to twenty, Kat vanishes.
    One year on, and struggling to come to terms with the events of last summer, Millie persuades the others to return to Creek House. It's meant to give them closure, but it could be a chance to find out what happened. After all, people don't just disappear, do they?
    A tightly plotted thriller, perfect for fans of Karen McManus, Holly Jackson, THE GREAT GODDEN and WE WERE LIARS.
    Show book
  • Classic Kid Stories 2 - cover

    Classic Kid Stories 2

    Various authors

    • 0
    • 0
    • 0
    Smith Show Media presents Classic Kid Stories 2, exciting stories for kids to enjoy.
    Show book
  • Manners at a Friend's House - cover

    Manners at a Friend's House

    Amanda Tourville

    • 0
    • 0
    • 0
    Should you remove your shoes at the door? Find out how good manners make visiting a friend’s house fun for everyone.
    Show book
  • And the Gods Laughed - cover

    And the Gods Laughed

    Fredric Brown

    • 0
    • 0
    • 0
    And the Gods Laughed by Fredric Brown - Hank was spinning quite a space lie—something about earrings wearing their owners. The crew got a boot out of the yarn—until they got to thinking. 
    You know how it is when you're with a work crew on one of the asteroids. You're there, stuck for the month you signed up for, with four other guys and nothing to do but talk. Space on the little tugs that you go in and return in, and live in while you're there, is at such a premium that there isn't room for a book or a magazine nor equipment for games. And you're out of radio range except for the usual once-a-terrestrial-day, system-wide newscasts. 
    So talking is the only indoor sport you can go in for. Talking and listening. You've plenty of time for both because a work-day, in space-suits, is only four hours and that with four fifteen-minute back-to-the-ship rest periods, so you actually work only three hours and spend half that time getting in and out the airlock. But those are union rules, and no asteroid mining outfit tries to chisel on them. 
    Anyway, what I'm trying to say is that talk is cheap on one of those work crews. With most of the day to do nothing else, you listen to some real whoppers, stories that would make the old-time Liars Clubs back on earth seem like Sunday-school meetings. And if your mind runs that way, you've got plenty of time to think up some yourself. 
    Charlie Dean was on our crew, and Charlie could tell some dillies. He'd been on Mars back in the old days when there was still trouble with the bolies, and when living on Mars was a lot like living on Earth back in the days of Indian fighting. The bolies thought and fought a lot like Amerinds, even though they were quadrupeds that looked like alligators on stilts—if you can picture an alligator on stilts—and used blow-guns instead of bows and arrows.
    Show book