fbpx
Wikipedia

Palindrome

A palindrome is a word, number, phrase, or other sequence of symbols that reads the same backwards as forwards, such as the words madam or racecar, the date and time 12/21/33 12:21, and the sentence: "A man, a plan, a canal – Panama". The 19-letter Finnish word saippuakivikauppias (a soapstone vendor), is the longest single-word palindrome in everyday use, while the 12-letter term tattarrattat (from James Joyce in Ulysses) is the longest in English.

The 4th-century Greek palindrome: ΝΙΨΟΝ ΑΝΟΜΗΜΑΤΑ ΜΗ ΜΟΝΑΝ ΟΨΙΝ (Wash your sins, not only your face), at the Hagia Sophia in Constantinople.

The word palindrome was introduced by English poet and writer Henry Peacham in 1638.[1] The concept of a palindrome can be dated to the 3rd-century BCE, although no examples survive; the first physical examples can be dated to the 1st-century CE with the Latin acrostic word square, the Sator Square (contains both word and sentence palindromes), and the 4th-century Greek Byzantine sentence palindrome nipson anomemata me monan opsin.[2][3]

Palindrome are also found in music (the table canon and crab canon) and biological structures (most genomes include palindromic gene sequences). In automata theory, the set of all palindromes over an alphabet is a context-free language, but it is not regular.

Etymology

The word palindrome was introduced by English poet and writer Henry Peacham in 1638.[1] It is derived from the Greek roots πάλιν 'again' and δρóμος 'way, direction'; a different word is used in Greek, καρκινικός 'carcinic' (lit. crab-like) to refer to letter-by-letter reversible writing.[2][3]

Historical development

 
A Sator square (in SATOR-form), on a wall in the medieval fortress town of Oppède-le-Vieux, France

The ancient Greek poet Sotades (3rd-century BC) invented a form of Ionic meter called Sotadic or Sotadean verse, which is sometimes said to have been palindromic,[4] but no examples survive,[5] and the exact nature of the readings is unclear.[6][7][8]

A 1st-century Latin palindrome was found as a graffito at Pompeii. This palindrome, known as the Sator Square, consists of a sentence written in Latin: sator arepo tenet opera rotas 'The sower Arepo holds with effort the wheels'. It is also an acrostic where the first letters of each word form the first word, the second letters form the second word, and so forth. Hence, it can be arranged into a word square that reads in four different ways: horizontally or vertically from either top left to bottom right or bottom right to top left. Other palindromes found at Pompeii include "Roma-Olina-Milo-Amor", which is also written as an acrostic square.[9][10] Indeed, composing palindromes was "a pastime of Roman landed gentry".[11]

 
Nipson anomēmata mē monan opsin palindrome, on a font at St Martin, Ludgate

Byzantine baptismal fonts were often inscribed with the 4th-century Greek palindrome, ΝΙΨΟΝ ΑΝΟΜΗΜΑΤΑ (or ΑΝΟΜΗΜΑ) ΜΗ ΜΟΝΑΝ ΟΨΙΝ ("Nipson anomēmata mē monan opsin") 'Wash [your] sin(s), not only [your] face', attributed to Gregory of Nazianzus;[5] most notably in the basilica of Hagia Sophia in Constantinople. The inscription is found on fonts in many churches in Western Europe: Orléans (St. Menin's Abbey); Dulwich College; Nottingham (St. Mary's); Worlingworth; Harlow; Knapton; London (St Martin, Ludgate); and Hadleigh (Suffolk).[12]

An 11th-century palindrome with the same square property is the Hebrew palindrome, פרשנו רעבתן שבדבש נתבער ונשרף perashnu: ra`avtan shebad'vash nitba`er venisraf 'We explained the glutton who is in the honey was burned and incinerated', credited to Abraham ibn Ezra in 1924,[13] and referring to the halachic question as to whether a fly landing in honey makes the honey treif (non-kosher).

The palindromic Latin riddle "In girum imus nocte et consumimur igni" 'we go in a circle at night and are consumed by fire' describes the behavior of moths. It is likely that this palindrome is from medieval rather than ancient times. The second word, borrowed from Greek, should properly be spelled gyrum.

In English, there are many palindrome words such as eye, madam, and deified, but English writers generally cited Latin and Greek palindromic sentences in the early 19th century;[14] though John Taylor had coined one in 1614: "Lewd did I live, & evil I did dwel" (with the ampersand being something of a "fudge"[15]). This is generally considered the first English-language palindrome sentence and was long-reputed, notably by the grammarian James "Hermes" Harris, to be the only one, despite many efforts to find others.[16][17] (Taylor had also composed two other, "rather indifferent", palindromic lines of poetry: "Deer Madam, Reed", "Deem if I meed".[4]) Then in 1848, a certain "J.T.R." coined "Able was I ere I saw Elba", which became famous after it was (implausibly) attributed to Napoleon (alluding to his exile on Elba).[18][17][19] Other well-known English palindromes are: "A man, a plan, a canal – Panama" (1948),[20] "Madam, I'm Adam" (1861),[21] and "Never odd or even".

Types

Characters, words, or lines

The most familiar palindromes in English are character-unit palindromes, where the characters read the same backward as forward. Examples are civic, radar, level, rotor, kayak, madam, and refer. The longest common ones are rotator, deified, racecar and reviver; longer examples such as redivider, kinnikinnik and tattarrattat are orders of magnitude rarer.[22]

There are also word-unit palindromes in which the unit of reversal is the word ("Is it crazy how saying sentences backwards creates backwards sentences saying how crazy it is?"). Word-unit palindromes were made popular in the recreational linguistics community by J. A. Lindon in the 1960s. Occasional examples in English were created in the 19th century. Several in French and Latin date to the Middle Ages.[23]

There are also line-unit palindromes, most often poems. These possess an initial set of lines which, precisely halfway through, is repeated in reverse order, without alteration to word order within each line, and in a way that the second half continues the "story" related in the first half in a way that makes sense, this last being key.[24]

Sentences and phrases

 
Ambigram of the palindrome "Dogma I am God"

Palindromes often consist of a sentence or phrase, e.g., "Mr. Owl ate my metal worm", "Do geese see God?", or "Was it a car or a cat I saw?". Punctuation, capitalization, and spaces are usually ignored. Some, such as "Rats live on no evil star", "Live on time, emit no evil", and "Step on no pets", include the spaces.

Names

Some names are palindromes, such as the given names Hannah, Ava, Aviva, Anna, Eve, Bob and Otto, or the surnames Harrah, Renner, Salas, and Nenonen. Lon Nol (1913–1985) was Prime Minister of Cambodia. Nisio Isin is a Japanese novelist and manga writer, whose pseudonym (西尾 維新, Nishio Ishin) is a palindrome when romanized using the Kunrei-shiki or the Nihon-shiki systems, and is often written as NisiOisiN to emphasize this. Some people have changed their name in order to make it palindromic (including as the actor Robert Trebor and rock-vocalist Ola Salo), while others were given a palindromic name at birth (such as the philologist Revilo P. Oliver, the flamenco dancer Sara Baras, the runner Anuța Cătună, the sportswriter Mark Kram and the creator of the Eden Project Tim Smit).

There are also palindromic names in fictional media. "Stanley Yelnats" is the name of the main character in Holes, a 1998 novel and 2003 film. Five of the fictional Pokémon species have palindromic names in English (Eevee, Girafarig, Farigiraf, Ho-Oh, and Alomomola), as does the region Alola.

The 1970s pop band ABBA is a palindrome using the starting letter of the first name of each of the four band members.

Numbers

The digits of a palindromic number are the same read backwards as forwards, for example, 91019; decimal representation is usually assumed. In recreational mathematics, palindromic numbers with special properties are sought. For example, 191 and 313 are palindromic primes.

Whether Lychrel numbers exist is an unsolved problem in mathematics about whether all numbers become palindromes when they are continuously reversed and added. For example, 56 is not a Lychrel number as 56 + 65 = 121, and 121 is a palindrome. The number 59 becomes a palindrome after three iterations: 59 + 95 = 154; 154 + 451 = 605; 605 + 506 = 1111, so 59 is not a Lychrel number either. Numbers such as 196 are thought to never become palindromes when this reversal process is carried out and are therefore suspected of being Lychrel numbers. If a number is not a Lychrel number, it is called a "delayed palindrome" (56 has a delay of 1 and 59 has a delay of 3). In January 2017 the number 1,999,291,987,030,606,810 was published in OEIS as A281509, and described as "The Largest Known Most Delayed Palindrome", with a delay of 261. Several smaller 261-delay palindromes were published separately as A281508.

Every positive integer can be written as the sum of three palindromic numbers in every number system with base 5 or greater.[25]

Dates

A day or timestamp is a palindrome when its digits are the same when reversed. Only the digits are considered in this determination and the component separators (hyphens, slashes, and dots) are ignored. Short digits may be used as in 11/11/11 11:11 or long digits as in 2 February 2020.

A notable palindrome day is this century's 2 February 2020 because this date is a palindrome regardless of the date format by country (yyyy-mm-dd, dd-mm-yyyy, or mm-dd-yyyy) used in various countries. For this reason, this date has also been termed as a "Universal Palindrome Day".[26][27] Other universal palindrome days include, almost a millennium previously, 11/11/1111, the future 12/12/2121, and in a millennium 03/03/3030.[28]

In speech

A phonetic palindrome is a portion of speech that is identical or roughly identical when reversed. It can arise in context where language is played with, for example in slang dialects like verlan.[29] In the French language, there is the phrase une Slave valse nue ("a Slavic woman waltzes naked"), phonemically /yn slav vals ny/.[30] John Oswald discussed his experience of phonetic palindromes while working on audio tape versions of the cut-up technique using recorded readings by William S. Burroughs.[31][32] A list of phonetic palindromes discussed by word puzzle columnist O.V. Michaelsen (Ove Ofteness) include "crew work"/"work crew", "dry yard", "easy", "Funny enough", "Let Bob tell", "new moon", "selfless", "Sorry, Ross", "Talk, Scott", "to boot", "top spot" (also an orthographic palindrome), "Y'all lie", "You're caught. Talk, Roy", and "You're damn mad, Roy".[33]

Longest palindromes

The longest single-word palindrome in the Oxford English Dictionary is the 12-letter onomatopoeic word tattarrattat, coined by James Joyce in Ulysses (1922) for a knock on the door.[34][35][36] The Guinness Book of Records gives the title to the 11-letter detartrated, the preterite and past participle of detartrate, a chemical term meaning to remove tartrates. The 9-letter word Rotavator, a trademarked name for an agricultural machine, is listed in dictionaries as being the longest single-word palindrome. The 9-letter term redivider is used by some writers, but appears to be an invented or derived term; only redivide and redivision appear in the Shorter Oxford English Dictionary; the 9-letter word Malayalam, a language of southern India, is also of equal length.

According to Guinness World Records, the Finnish 19-letter word saippuakivikauppias (a soapstone vendor), is the world's longest palindromic word in everyday use.[12]

English palindrome sentences of notable length include mathematician Peter Hilton's "Doc, note: I dissent. A fast never prevents a fatness. I diet on cod",[37] and Scottish poet Alastair Reid's "T. Eliot, top bard, notes putrid tang emanating, is sad; I'd assign it a name: gnat dirt upset on drab pot toilet."[38]

In English, two palindromic novels have been published: Satire: Veritas by David Stephens (1980, 58,795 letters), and Dr Awkward & Olson in Oslo by Lawrence Levine (1986, 31,954 words).[39] Another palindromic English work is a 224-word long poem, "Dammit I'm Mad", written by Demetri Martin.[40] "Weird Al" Yankovic's song "Bob" is composed entirely of palindromes.[41]

Other occurrences

Classical music

 
Centre part of palindrome in Alban Berg's opera Lulu

Joseph Haydn's Symphony No. 47 in G is nicknamed "the Palindrome". In the third movement, a minuet and trio, the second half of the minuet is the same as the first but backwards, the second half of the ensuing trio similarly reflects the first half, and then the minuet is repeated.

The interlude from Alban Berg's opera Lulu is a palindrome,[42] as are sections and pieces, in arch form, by many other composers, including James Tenney, and most famously Béla Bartók. George Crumb also used musical palindrome to text paint the Federico García Lorca poem "¿Por qué nací?", the first movement of three in his fourth book of Madrigals. Igor Stravinsky's final composition, The Owl and the Pussy Cat, is a palindrome.[43][unreliable source?]

The first movement from Constant Lambert's ballet Horoscope (1938) is entitled "Palindromic Prelude". Lambert claimed that the theme was dictated to him by the ghost of Bernard van Dieren, who had died in 1936.[44][unreliable source?]

British composer Robert Simpson also composed music in the palindrome or based on palindromic themes; the slow movement of his Symphony No. 2 is a palindrome, as is the slow movement of his String Quartet No. 1. His hour-long String Quartet No. 9 consists of thirty-two variations and a fugue on a palindromic theme of Haydn (from the minuet of his Symphony No. 47). All of Simpson's thirty-two variations are themselves palindromic.

Hin und Zurück ("There and Back": 1927) is an operatic 'sketch' (Op. 45a) in one scene by Paul Hindemith, with a German libretto by Marcellus Schiffer. It is essentially a dramatic palindrome. Through the first half, a tragedy unfolds between two lovers, involving jealousy, murder and suicide. Then, in the reversing second half, this is replayed with the lines sung in reverse order to produce a happy ending.

The music of Anton Webern is often palindromic. Webern, who had studied the music of the Renaissance composer Heinrich Isaac, was extremely interested in symmetries in music, be they horizontal or vertical. An example of horizontal or linear symmetry in Webern's music is the first phrase in the second movement of the symphony, Op. 21. A striking example of vertical symmetry is the second movement of the Piano Variations, Op. 27, in which Webern arranges every pitch of this dodecaphonic work around the central pitch axis of A4. From this, each downward reaching interval is replicated exactly in the opposite direction. For example, a G3—13 half-steps down from A4 is replicated as a B5—13 half-steps above.

Just as the letters of a verbal palindrome are not reversed, so are the elements of a musical palindrome usually presented in the same form in both halves. Although these elements are usually single notes, palindromes may be made using more complex elements. For example, Karlheinz Stockhausen's composition Mixtur, originally written in 1964, consists of twenty sections, called "moments", which may be permuted in several different ways, including retrograde presentation, and two versions may be made in a single program. When the composer revised the work in 2003, he prescribed such a palindromic performance, with the twenty moments first played in a "forwards" version, and then "backwards". Each moment, however, is a complex musical unit, and is played in the same direction in each half of the program.[45] By contrast, Karel Goeyvaerts's 1953 electronic composition, Nummer 5 (met zuivere tonen) is an exact palindrome: not only does each event in the second half of the piece occur according to an axis of symmetry at the centre of the work, but each event itself is reversed, so that the note attacks in the first half become note decays in the second, and vice versa. It is a perfect example of Goeyvaerts's aesthetics, the perfect example of the imperfection of perfection.[46]

In classical music, a crab canon is a canon in which one line of the melody is reversed in time and pitch from the other. A large-scale musical palindrome covering more than one movement is called "chiastic", referring to the cross-shaped Greek letter "χ" (pronounced /ˈkaɪ/.) This is usually a form of reference to the crucifixion; for example, the Crucifixus movement of Bach's Mass in B minor. The purpose of such palindromic balancing is to focus the listener on the central movement, much as one would focus on the centre of the cross in the crucifixion. Other examples are found in Bach's cantata BWV 4, Christ lag in Todes Banden, Handel's Messiah and Fauré's Requiem.[47]

A table canon is a rectangular piece of sheet music intended to be played by two musicians facing each other across a table with the music between them, with one musician viewing the music upside down compared to the other. The result is somewhat like two speakers simultaneously reading the Sator Square from opposite sides, except that it is typically in two-part polyphony rather than in unison.[48]

Biological structures

 
Palindrome of DNA structure
A: Palindrome, B: Loop, C: Stem

Palindromic motifs are found in most genomes or sets of genetic instructions, palindromic motifs are found. The meaning of palindrome in the context of genetics is slightly different, from the definition used for words and sentences. Since the DNA is formed by two paired strands of nucleotides, and the nucleotides always pair in the same way (Adenine (A) with Thymine (T), Cytosine (C) with Guanine (G)), a (single-stranded) sequence of DNA is said to be a palindrome if it is equal to its complementary sequence read backward. For example, the sequence ACCTAGGT is palindromic because its complement is TGGATCCA, which is equal to the original sequence in reverse complement.

A palindromic DNA sequence may form a hairpin. Palindromic motifs are made by the order of the nucleotides that specify the complex chemicals (proteins) that, as a result of those genetic instructions, the cell is to produce. They have been specially researched in bacterial chromosomes and in the so-called Bacterial Interspersed Mosaic Elements (BIMEs) scattered over them. Recently[when?] a research genome sequencing project discovered that many of the bases on the Y-chromosome are arranged as palindromes.[49] A palindrome structure allows the Y-chromosome to repair itself by bending over at the middle if one side is damaged.

It is believed that palindromes are also found in proteins,[50][51] but their role in the protein function is not clearly known. It has recently[52] been suggested that the prevalence existence of palindromes in peptides might be related to the prevalence of low-complexity regions in proteins, as palindromes frequently are associated with low-complexity sequences. Their prevalence might also be related to an alpha helical formation propensity of these sequences,[52] or in formation of proteins/protein complexes.[53]

Computation theory

In automata theory, a set of all palindromes in a given alphabet is a typical example of a language that is context-free, but not regular. This means that it is impossible for a computer with a finite amount of memory to reliably test for palindromes. (For practical purposes with modern computers, this limitation would apply only to impractically long letter sequences.)

In addition, the set of palindromes may not be reliably tested by a deterministic pushdown automaton which also means that they are not LR(k)-parsable or LL(k)-parsable. When reading a palindrome from left to right, it is, in essence, impossible to locate the "middle" until the entire word has been read completely.

It is possible to find the longest palindromic substring of a given input string in linear time.[54][55]

The palindromic density of an infinite word w over an alphabet A is defined to be zero if only finitely many prefixes are palindromes; otherwise, letting the palindromic prefixes be of lengths nk for k=1,2,... we define the density to be

 

Among aperiodic words, the largest possible palindromic density is achieved by the Fibonacci word, which has density 1/φ, where φ is the Golden ratio.[56]

A palstar is a concatenation of palindromic strings, excluding the trivial one-letter palindromes – otherwise all strings would be palstars.[54]

Notable palindromists

See also

References

  1. ^ a b Henry Peacham, The Truth of our Times Revealed out of One Mans Experience, 1638, p. 123
  2. ^ a b Triantaphylides Dictionary, Portal for the Greek Language. "Combined word search for καρκινικός". www.greek-language.gr. Retrieved 6 May 2019.
  3. ^ a b William Martin Leake, Researches in Greece, 1814, p. 85
  4. ^ a b H.B. Wheatley, Of Anagrams: A Monograph Treating of Their History from the Earliest Ages..., London, 1862, p. 9-11
  5. ^ a b Alex Preminger, ed., Princeton Encyclopedia of Poetry and Poetics, 1965, JSTOR j.ctt13x0qvn, s.v. 'palindrome', p. 596
  6. ^ Jan Kwapisz, The Paradigm of Simias: Essays on Poetic Eccentricity, p. 62-68
  7. ^ Alex Preminger, ed., Princeton Encyclopedia of Poetry and Poetics, 1965, JSTOR j.ctt13x0qvn, s.v. 'Sotadean', p. 784
  8. ^ The Century Dictionary, 1889, s.v. 'Sotadic', p. 5:5780. "Sotadic verse... A palindromic verse; so named apparently from some ancient examples of Sotadean verse being palindromic."
  9. ^ O'Donald, Megan (2018). "The ROTAS "Wheel": Form and Content in a Pompeian Graffito". Zeitschrift für Papyrologie und Epigraphik. 205: 77–91. JSTOR 26603971. Retrieved 10 September 2022.
  10. ^ Sheldon, Rose Mary (2003). "The Sator Rebus: An unsolved cryptogram?". Cryptologia. 27 (3): 233–287. doi:10.1080/0161-110391891919. S2CID 218542154. Retrieved 10 September 2022.
  11. ^ Fishwick, Duncan (1959). "An Early Christian Cryptogram?" (PDF). CCHA. University of Manitoba. 26: 29–41. Retrieved 13 October 2021.
  12. ^ a b "Longest palindromic word". Guinness World Records. Retrieved 12 January 2017.
  13. ^ Soclof, Adam (28 December 2011). "Jewish Wordplay". Jewish Telegraphic Agency. Retrieved 21 November 2016.
  14. ^ S(ilvanus) Urban, "Classical Literature: On Macaronic Poetry", The Gentleman's Magazine, or Monthly Intelligencer, London, 100:part 2:34–36 (New Series 23) (July 1830)
  15. ^ Richard Lederer, The Word Circus: A Letter-perfect Book, 1998, ISBN 0877793549, p.54
  16. ^ "On Palindromes" The New Monthly Magazine 2:170–173 (July–December 1821)
  17. ^ a b "Ingenious Arrangement of Words", The Gazette of the Union, Golden Rule, and Odd Fellows' Family Companion 9:30 (July 8, 1848)
  18. ^ "Able Was I Ere I Saw Elba", Quote Investigator September 15, 2013
  19. ^ "Doings in Baltimore". Gazette of the Union, Golden Rule and Odd-fellows' Family Companion. 9 (2): 30. 8 July 1848.
  20. ^ By Leigh Mercer, published in Notes and Queries, 13 November 1948, according to The Yale Book of Quotations, F. R. Shapiro, ed. (2006, ISBN 0-300-10798-6).
  21. ^ Do you give it up?: A collection of the most amusing conundrums, riddles, etc. of the day, London, 1861, p. 4
  22. ^ Google nGrams frequencies
  23. ^ Mark J. Nelson (7 February 2012). "Word-unit palindromes". Retrieved 18 November 2012.
  24. ^ "Never Odd Or Even, and Other Tricks Words Can Do" by O.V. Michaelsen (Sterling Publishing Company: New York), 2005 p124-7
  25. ^ Cilleruelo, Javier; Luca, Florian; Baxter, Lewis (19 February 2016). "Every positive integer is a sum of three palindromes". arXiv:1602.06208 [math.NT].
  26. ^ "Universal Palindrome Day". 2 February 2020.
  27. ^ "#PalindromeDay: Geeks around the world celebrate 02/02/2020". BBC. 2 February 2020.
  28. ^ Held, Amy (2 February 2020). "Why A Day Like Sunday Hasn't Been Seen In 900 Years". NPR.
  29. ^ Goertz, Karein K. (2003). "Showing Her Colors: An Afro-German Writes the Blues in Black and White". Callaloo. 26 (2): 306–319. doi:10.1353/cal.2003.0045. JSTOR 3300855. S2CID 161346520.
  30. ^ Durand, Gerard (2003). Palindromes en Folie. Les Dossiers de l'Aquitaine. p. 32. ISBN 978-2846220361.
  31. ^ "Section titled "On Burroughs and Burrows ..."". Pfony.com. Retrieved 23 April 2012.
  32. ^ Reversible audio cut-ups of William S. Burroughs' voice 13 March 2008 at the Wayback Machine, including an acoustic palindrome in example 5 (requires Flash)
  33. ^ Michaelsen, O.V. (1998). Words at play: quips, quirks and oddities. Sterling.
  34. ^ @OED (17 September 2015). "The longest palindrome defined in the OED is 'tattarrattat', meaning 'a knock at the door'. It was used by James Joyce in 'Ulysses'. (2/2)" (Tweet) – via Twitter.
  35. ^ James Joyce (1982). Ulysses. Editions Artisan Devereaux. pp. 434–. ISBN 978-1-936694-38-9. ...I was just beginning to yawn with nerves thinking he was trying to make a fool of me when I knew his tattarrattat at the door he must ...
  36. ^ O.A. Booty (1 January 2002). Funny Side of English. Pustak Mahal. pp. 203–. ISBN 978-81-223-0799-3. The longest palindromic word in English has 12 letters: tattarrattat. This word, appearing in the Oxford English Dictionary, was invented by James Joyce and used in his book Ulysses (1922), and is an imitation of the sound of someone ...
  37. ^ "Professor Peter Hilton". Daily Telegraph. London. 10 November 2010. Retrieved 30 April 2011.
  38. ^ By Brendan Gill, published in Here At The New Yorker, (1997, ISBN 0-306-80810-2).
  39. ^ Eckler, Ross (1996). Making the Alphabet Dance. NY: St. Martin's. p. 36. ISBN 978-0-333-90334-6.
  40. ^ . Yale University. Mathematics Department. Archived from the original on 29 June 2010. Retrieved 17 February 2014.
  41. ^ Twardzik, Tom (25 October 2016). "Celebrate Bob Dylan's Nobel with Weird Al". Popdust. Retrieved 15 June 2021.
  42. ^ "Lulu". British Library. Retrieved 7 August 2021.
  43. ^ A helpful list is at http://deconstructing-jim.blogspot.com/2010/03/musical-palindromes.html
  44. ^ "Answers.com". Answers.com. Retrieved 23 April 2012.
  45. ^ Rudolf Frisius, Karlheinz Stockhausen II: Die Werke 1950–1977; Gespräch mit Karlheinz Stockhausen, "Es geht aufwärts" (Mainz, London, Berlin, Madrid, New York, Paris, Prague, Tokyo, Toronto: Schott Musik International, 2008): 164–65. ISBN 978-3-7957-0249-6.
  46. ^ M[orag] J[osephine] Grant, Serial Music, Serial Aesthetics: Compositional Theory in Post-war Europe (Cambridge, U.K.; New York: Cambridge University Press, 2001): 64–65.
  47. ^ Charton, Shawn E. Jennens vs. Handel: Decoding the Mysteries of Messiah.
  48. ^ Benjamin, Thomas (2003). The Craft of Tonal Counterpoint. New York: Routledge. p. 120. ISBN 0-415-94391-4. Retrieved 14 April 2011.
  49. ^ "2003 Release: Mechanism Preserves Y Chromosome Gene". National Human Genome Research Institute (NHGRI). Retrieved 21 November 2017.
  50. ^ Ohno S (1990). "Intrinsic evolution of proteins. The role of peptidic palindromes". Riv. Biol. 83 (2–3): 287–91, 405–10. PMID 2128128.
  51. ^ Giel-Pietraszuk M, Hoffmann M, Dolecka S, Rychlewski J, Barciszewski J (February 2003). . J. Protein Chem. 22 (2): 109–13. doi:10.1023/A:1023454111924. PMID 12760415. S2CID 28294669. Archived from the original (PDF) on 14 December 2019. Retrieved 17 February 2011.
  52. ^ a b Sheari A, Kargar M, Katanforoush A, et al. (2008). "A tale of two symmetrical tails: structural and functional characteristics of palindromes in proteins". BMC Bioinformatics. 9: 274. doi:10.1186/1471-2105-9-274. PMC 2474621. PMID 18547401.
  53. ^ Pinotsis N, Wilmanns M (October 2008). "Protein assemblies with palindromic structure motifs". Cell. Mol. Life Sci. 65 (19): 2953–6. doi:10.1007/s00018-008-8265-1. PMID 18791850. S2CID 29569626.
  54. ^ a b Crochemore, Maxime; Rytter, Wojciech (2003), "8.1 Searching for symmetric words", Jewels of Stringology: Text Algorithms, World Scientific, pp. 111–114, ISBN 978-981-02-4897-0
  55. ^ Gusfield, Dan (1997), "9.2 Finding all maximal palindromes in linear time", Algorithms on Strings, Trees, and Sequences, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, pp. 197–199, doi:10.1017/CBO9780511574931, ISBN 978-0-521-58519-4, MR 1460730
  56. ^ Adamczewski, Boris; Bugeaud, Yann (2010), "8. Transcendence and diophantine approximation", in Berthé, Valérie; Rigo, Michael (eds.), Combinatorics, automata, and number theory, Encyclopedia of Mathematics and its Applications, vol. 135, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, p. 443, ISBN 978-0-521-51597-9, Zbl 1271.11073

Further reading

External links

palindrome, redirects, here, film, film, palindrome, word, number, phrase, other, sequence, symbols, that, reads, same, backwards, forwards, such, words, madam, racecar, date, time, sentence, plan, canal, panama, letter, finnish, word, saippuakivikauppias, soa. Palindromes redirects here For the film see Palindromes film A palindrome is a word number phrase or other sequence of symbols that reads the same backwards as forwards such as the words madam or racecar the date and time 12 21 33 12 21 and the sentence A man a plan a canal Panama The 19 letter Finnish word saippuakivikauppias a soapstone vendor is the longest single word palindrome in everyday use while the 12 letter term tattarrattat from James Joyce in Ulysses is the longest in English The 4th century Greek palindrome NIPSON ANOMHMATA MH MONAN OPSIN Wash your sins not only your face at the Hagia Sophia in Constantinople The word palindrome was introduced by English poet and writer Henry Peacham in 1638 1 The concept of a palindrome can be dated to the 3rd century BCE although no examples survive the first physical examples can be dated to the 1st century CE with the Latin acrostic word square the Sator Square contains both word and sentence palindromes and the 4th century Greek Byzantine sentence palindrome nipson anomemata me monan opsin 2 3 Palindrome are also found in music the table canon and crab canon and biological structures most genomes include palindromic gene sequences In automata theory the set of all palindromes over an alphabet is a context free language but it is not regular Contents 1 Etymology 2 Historical development 3 Types 3 1 Characters words or lines 3 2 Sentences and phrases 3 3 Names 3 4 Numbers 3 5 Dates 3 6 In speech 4 Longest palindromes 5 Other occurrences 5 1 Classical music 5 2 Biological structures 5 3 Computation theory 6 Notable palindromists 7 See also 8 References 9 Further reading 10 External linksEtymology EditThe word palindrome was introduced by English poet and writer Henry Peacham in 1638 1 It is derived from the Greek roots palin again and dromos way direction a different word is used in Greek karkinikos carcinic lit crab like to refer to letter by letter reversible writing 2 3 Historical development Edit A Sator square in SATOR form on a wall in the medieval fortress town of Oppede le Vieux France The ancient Greek poet Sotades 3rd century BC invented a form of Ionic meter called Sotadic or Sotadean verse which is sometimes said to have been palindromic 4 but no examples survive 5 and the exact nature of the readings is unclear 6 7 8 A 1st century Latin palindrome was found as a graffito at Pompeii This palindrome known as the Sator Square consists of a sentence written in Latin sator arepo tenet opera rotas The sower Arepo holds with effort the wheels It is also an acrostic where the first letters of each word form the first word the second letters form the second word and so forth Hence it can be arranged into a word square that reads in four different ways horizontally or vertically from either top left to bottom right or bottom right to top left Other palindromes found at Pompeii include Roma Olina Milo Amor which is also written as an acrostic square 9 10 Indeed composing palindromes was a pastime of Roman landed gentry 11 Nipson anomemata me monan opsin palindrome on a font at St Martin Ludgate Byzantine baptismal fonts were often inscribed with the 4th century Greek palindrome NIPSON ANOMHMATA or ANOMHMA MH MONAN OPSIN Nipson anomemata me monan opsin Wash your sin s not only your face attributed to Gregory of Nazianzus 5 most notably in the basilica of Hagia Sophia in Constantinople The inscription is found on fonts in many churches in Western Europe Orleans St Menin s Abbey Dulwich College Nottingham St Mary s Worlingworth Harlow Knapton London St Martin Ludgate and Hadleigh Suffolk 12 An 11th century palindrome with the same square property is the Hebrew palindrome פרשנו רעבתן שבדבש נתבער ונשרף perashnu ra avtan shebad vash nitba er venisraf We explained the glutton who is in the honey was burned and incinerated credited to Abraham ibn Ezra in 1924 13 and referring to the halachic question as to whether a fly landing in honey makes the honey treif non kosher The palindromic Latin riddle In girum imus nocte et consumimur igni we go in a circle at night and are consumed by fire describes the behavior of moths It is likely that this palindrome is from medieval rather than ancient times The second word borrowed from Greek should properly be spelled gyrum In English there are many palindrome words such as eye madam and deified but English writers generally cited Latin and Greek palindromic sentences in the early 19th century 14 though John Taylor had coined one in 1614 Lewd did I live amp evil I did dwel with the ampersand being something of a fudge 15 This is generally considered the first English language palindrome sentence and was long reputed notably by the grammarian James Hermes Harris to be the only one despite many efforts to find others 16 17 Taylor had also composed two other rather indifferent palindromic lines of poetry Deer Madam Reed Deem if I meed 4 Then in 1848 a certain J T R coined Able was I ere I saw Elba which became famous after it was implausibly attributed to Napoleon alluding to his exile on Elba 18 17 19 Other well known English palindromes are A man a plan a canal Panama 1948 20 Madam I m Adam 1861 21 and Never odd or even Types EditCharacters words or lines Edit The most familiar palindromes in English are character unit palindromes where the characters read the same backward as forward Examples are civic radar level rotor kayak madam and refer The longest common ones are rotator deified racecar and reviver longer examples such as redivider kinnikinnik and tattarrattat are orders of magnitude rarer 22 There are also word unit palindromes in which the unit of reversal is the word Is it crazy how saying sentences backwards creates backwards sentences saying how crazy it is Word unit palindromes were made popular in the recreational linguistics community by J A Lindon in the 1960s Occasional examples in English were created in the 19th century Several in French and Latin date to the Middle Ages 23 There are also line unit palindromes most often poems These possess an initial set of lines which precisely halfway through is repeated in reverse order without alteration to word order within each line and in a way that the second half continues the story related in the first half in a way that makes sense this last being key 24 Sentences and phrases Edit Ambigram of the palindrome Dogma I am God Palindromes often consist of a sentence or phrase e g Mr Owl ate my metal worm Do geese see God or Was it a car or a cat I saw Punctuation capitalization and spaces are usually ignored Some such as Rats live on no evil star Live on time emit no evil and Step on no pets include the spaces Names Edit Some names are palindromes such as the given names Hannah Ava Aviva Anna Eve Bob and Otto or the surnames Harrah Renner Salas and Nenonen Lon Nol 1913 1985 was Prime Minister of Cambodia Nisio Isin is a Japanese novelist and manga writer whose pseudonym 西尾 維新 Nishio Ishin is a palindrome when romanized using the Kunrei shiki or the Nihon shiki systems and is often written as NisiOisiN to emphasize this Some people have changed their name in order to make it palindromic including as the actor Robert Trebor and rock vocalist Ola Salo while others were given a palindromic name at birth such as the philologist Revilo P Oliver the flamenco dancer Sara Baras the runner Anuța Cătună the sportswriter Mark Kram and the creator of the Eden Project Tim Smit There are also palindromic names in fictional media Stanley Yelnats is the name of the main character in Holes a 1998 novel and 2003 film Five of the fictional Pokemon species have palindromic names in English Eevee Girafarig Farigiraf Ho Oh and Alomomola as does the region Alola The 1970s pop band ABBA is a palindrome using the starting letter of the first name of each of the four band members Numbers Edit Main article Palindromic number Main article Periodic continued fraction The digits of a palindromic number are the same read backwards as forwards for example 91019 decimal representation is usually assumed In recreational mathematics palindromic numbers with special properties are sought For example 191 and 313 are palindromic primes Whether Lychrel numbers exist is an unsolved problem in mathematics about whether all numbers become palindromes when they are continuously reversed and added For example 56 is not a Lychrel number as 56 65 121 and 121 is a palindrome The number 59 becomes a palindrome after three iterations 59 95 154 154 451 605 605 506 1111 so 59 is not a Lychrel number either Numbers such as 196 are thought to never become palindromes when this reversal process is carried out and are therefore suspected of being Lychrel numbers If a number is not a Lychrel number it is called a delayed palindrome 56 has a delay of 1 and 59 has a delay of 3 In January 2017 the number 1 999 291 987 030 606 810 was published in OEIS as A281509 and described as The Largest Known Most Delayed Palindrome with a delay of 261 Several smaller 261 delay palindromes were published separately as A281508 Every positive integer can be written as the sum of three palindromic numbers in every number system with base 5 or greater 25 Dates Edit A day or timestamp is a palindrome when its digits are the same when reversed Only the digits are considered in this determination and the component separators hyphens slashes and dots are ignored Short digits may be used as in 11 11 11 11 11 or long digits as in 2 February 2020 A notable palindrome day is this century s 2 February 2020 because this date is a palindrome regardless of the date format by country yyyy mm dd dd mm yyyy or mm dd yyyy used in various countries For this reason this date has also been termed as a Universal Palindrome Day 26 27 Other universal palindrome days include almost a millennium previously 11 11 1111 the future 12 12 2121 and in a millennium 03 03 3030 28 In speech Edit Une Slave valse nue played forward and backward source source Problems playing this file See media help A phonetic palindrome is a portion of speech that is identical or roughly identical when reversed It can arise in context where language is played with for example in slang dialects like verlan 29 In the French language there is the phrase une Slave valse nue a Slavic woman waltzes naked phonemically yn slav vals ny 30 John Oswald discussed his experience of phonetic palindromes while working on audio tape versions of the cut up technique using recorded readings by William S Burroughs 31 32 A list of phonetic palindromes discussed by word puzzle columnist O V Michaelsen Ove Ofteness include crew work work crew dry yard easy Funny enough Let Bob tell new moon selfless Sorry Ross Talk Scott to boot top spot also an orthographic palindrome Y all lie You re caught Talk Roy and You re damn mad Roy 33 Longest palindromes EditThe longest single word palindrome in the Oxford English Dictionary is the 12 letter onomatopoeic word tattarrattat coined by James Joyce in Ulysses 1922 for a knock on the door 34 35 36 The Guinness Book of Records gives the title to the 11 letter detartrated the preterite and past participle of detartrate a chemical term meaning to remove tartrates The 9 letter word Rotavator a trademarked name for an agricultural machine is listed in dictionaries as being the longest single word palindrome The 9 letter term redivider is used by some writers but appears to be an invented or derived term only redivide and redivision appear in the Shorter Oxford English Dictionary the 9 letter word Malayalam a language of southern India is also of equal length According to Guinness World Records the Finnish 19 letter word saippuakivikauppias a soapstone vendor is the world s longest palindromic word in everyday use 12 English palindrome sentences of notable length include mathematician Peter Hilton s Doc note I dissent A fast never prevents a fatness I diet on cod 37 and Scottish poet Alastair Reid s T Eliot top bard notes putrid tang emanating is sad I d assign it a name gnat dirt upset on drab pot toilet 38 In English two palindromic novels have been published Satire Veritas by David Stephens 1980 58 795 letters and Dr Awkward amp Olson in Oslo by Lawrence Levine 1986 31 954 words 39 Another palindromic English work is a 224 word long poem Dammit I m Mad written by Demetri Martin 40 Weird Al Yankovic s song Bob is composed entirely of palindromes 41 Other occurrences EditClassical music Edit Centre part of palindrome in Alban Berg s opera Lulu Joseph Haydn s Symphony No 47 in G is nicknamed the Palindrome In the third movement a minuet and trio the second half of the minuet is the same as the first but backwards the second half of the ensuing trio similarly reflects the first half and then the minuet is repeated The interlude from Alban Berg s opera Lulu is a palindrome 42 as are sections and pieces in arch form by many other composers including James Tenney and most famously Bela Bartok George Crumb also used musical palindrome to text paint the Federico Garcia Lorca poem Por que naci the first movement of three in his fourth book of Madrigals Igor Stravinsky s final composition The Owl and the Pussy Cat is a palindrome 43 unreliable source The first movement from Constant Lambert s ballet Horoscope 1938 is entitled Palindromic Prelude Lambert claimed that the theme was dictated to him by the ghost of Bernard van Dieren who had died in 1936 44 unreliable source British composer Robert Simpson also composed music in the palindrome or based on palindromic themes the slow movement of his Symphony No 2 is a palindrome as is the slow movement of his String Quartet No 1 His hour long String Quartet No 9 consists of thirty two variations and a fugue on a palindromic theme of Haydn from the minuet of his Symphony No 47 All of Simpson s thirty two variations are themselves palindromic Hin und Zuruck There and Back 1927 is an operatic sketch Op 45a in one scene by Paul Hindemith with a German libretto by Marcellus Schiffer It is essentially a dramatic palindrome Through the first half a tragedy unfolds between two lovers involving jealousy murder and suicide Then in the reversing second half this is replayed with the lines sung in reverse order to produce a happy ending The music of Anton Webern is often palindromic Webern who had studied the music of the Renaissance composer Heinrich Isaac was extremely interested in symmetries in music be they horizontal or vertical An example of horizontal or linear symmetry in Webern s music is the first phrase in the second movement of the symphony Op 21 A striking example of vertical symmetry is the second movement of the Piano Variations Op 27 in which Webern arranges every pitch of this dodecaphonic work around the central pitch axis of A4 From this each downward reaching interval is replicated exactly in the opposite direction For example a G 3 13 half steps down from A4 is replicated as a B 5 13 half steps above Just as the letters of a verbal palindrome are not reversed so are the elements of a musical palindrome usually presented in the same form in both halves Although these elements are usually single notes palindromes may be made using more complex elements For example Karlheinz Stockhausen s composition Mixtur originally written in 1964 consists of twenty sections called moments which may be permuted in several different ways including retrograde presentation and two versions may be made in a single program When the composer revised the work in 2003 he prescribed such a palindromic performance with the twenty moments first played in a forwards version and then backwards Each moment however is a complex musical unit and is played in the same direction in each half of the program 45 By contrast Karel Goeyvaerts s 1953 electronic composition Nummer 5 met zuivere tonen is an exact palindrome not only does each event in the second half of the piece occur according to an axis of symmetry at the centre of the work but each event itself is reversed so that the note attacks in the first half become note decays in the second and vice versa It is a perfect example of Goeyvaerts s aesthetics the perfect example of the imperfection of perfection 46 In classical music a crab canon is a canon in which one line of the melody is reversed in time and pitch from the other A large scale musical palindrome covering more than one movement is called chiastic referring to the cross shaped Greek letter x pronounced ˈkaɪ This is usually a form of reference to the crucifixion for example the Crucifixus movement of Bach s Mass in B minor The purpose of such palindromic balancing is to focus the listener on the central movement much as one would focus on the centre of the cross in the crucifixion Other examples are found in Bach s cantata BWV 4 Christ lag in Todes Banden Handel s Messiah and Faure s Requiem 47 A table canon is a rectangular piece of sheet music intended to be played by two musicians facing each other across a table with the music between them with one musician viewing the music upside down compared to the other The result is somewhat like two speakers simultaneously reading the Sator Square from opposite sides except that it is typically in two part polyphony rather than in unison 48 Biological structures Edit Main article Palindromic sequence Palindrome of DNA structureA Palindrome B Loop C Stem Palindromic motifs are found in most genomes or sets of genetic instructions palindromic motifs are found The meaning of palindrome in the context of genetics is slightly different from the definition used for words and sentences Since the DNA is formed by two paired strands of nucleotides and the nucleotides always pair in the same way Adenine A with Thymine T Cytosine C with Guanine G a single stranded sequence of DNA is said to be a palindrome if it is equal to its complementary sequence read backward For example the sequence ACCTAGGT is palindromic because its complement is TGGATCCA which is equal to the original sequence in reverse complement A palindromic DNA sequence may form a hairpin Palindromic motifs are made by the order of the nucleotides that specify the complex chemicals proteins that as a result of those genetic instructions the cell is to produce They have been specially researched in bacterial chromosomes and in the so called Bacterial Interspersed Mosaic Elements BIMEs scattered over them Recently when a research genome sequencing project discovered that many of the bases on the Y chromosome are arranged as palindromes 49 A palindrome structure allows the Y chromosome to repair itself by bending over at the middle if one side is damaged It is believed that palindromes are also found in proteins 50 51 but their role in the protein function is not clearly known It has recently 52 been suggested that the prevalence existence of palindromes in peptides might be related to the prevalence of low complexity regions in proteins as palindromes frequently are associated with low complexity sequences Their prevalence might also be related to an alpha helical formation propensity of these sequences 52 or in formation of proteins protein complexes 53 Computation theory Edit In automata theory a set of all palindromes in a given alphabet is a typical example of a language that is context free but not regular This means that it is impossible for a computer with a finite amount of memory to reliably test for palindromes For practical purposes with modern computers this limitation would apply only to impractically long letter sequences In addition the set of palindromes may not be reliably tested by a deterministic pushdown automaton which also means that they are not LR k parsable or LL k parsable When reading a palindrome from left to right it is in essence impossible to locate the middle until the entire word has been read completely It is possible to find the longest palindromic substring of a given input string in linear time 54 55 The palindromic density of an infinite word w over an alphabet A is defined to be zero if only finitely many prefixes are palindromes otherwise letting the palindromic prefixes be of lengths nk for k 1 2 we define the density to be d P w lim sup k n k 1 n k 1 displaystyle d P w left limsup k rightarrow infty frac n k 1 n k right 1 Among aperiodic words the largest possible palindromic density is achieved by the Fibonacci word which has density 1 f where f is the Golden ratio 56 A palstar is a concatenation of palindromic strings excluding the trivial one letter palindromes otherwise all strings would be palstars 54 Notable palindromists EditDmitry Avaliani 1938 2003 Howard W Bergerson 1922 2011 Hugo Brandt Corstius 1935 2014 Simo Frangen b 1963 Pasi Heikura b 1963 Velimir Khlebnikov 1885 1922 J A Lindon c 1914 1979 Leigh Mercer 1893 1977 best known for devising the palindrome A man a plan a canal Panama Georges Perec 1936 1982 Mark Saltveit b 1961 Anthony Etherin b 1981 Su Hui poet fourth century CE Baby Gramps active 1964 present See also EditAmbigram Anagram Ananym Anastrophe different word order Antimetabole Backmasking Bob Weird Al Yankovic song Chiasmus Constrained writing Eodermdrome I Palindrome I by They Might Be Giants List of English palindromic phrases List of palindromic places Mirror writing Palindroma a genus of spiders with palindromic species names Palindromic number Palindromic polynomial Pangram Yreka California for the palindromic Yreka Bakery and Yrella GalleryReferences Edit a b Henry Peacham The Truth of our Times Revealed out of One Mans Experience 1638 p 123 a b Triantaphylides Dictionary Portal for the Greek Language Combined word search for karkinikos www greek language gr Retrieved 6 May 2019 a b William Martin Leake Researches in Greece 1814 p 85 a b H B Wheatley Of Anagrams A Monograph Treating of Their History from the Earliest Ages London 1862 p 9 11 a b Alex Preminger ed Princeton Encyclopedia of Poetry and Poetics 1965 JSTOR j ctt13x0qvn s v palindrome p 596 Jan Kwapisz The Paradigm of Simias Essays on Poetic Eccentricity p 62 68 Alex Preminger ed Princeton Encyclopedia of Poetry and Poetics 1965 JSTOR j ctt13x0qvn s v Sotadean p 784 The Century Dictionary 1889 s v Sotadic p 5 5780 Sotadic verse A palindromic verse so named apparently from some ancient examples of Sotadean verse being palindromic O Donald Megan 2018 The ROTAS Wheel Form and Content in a Pompeian Graffito Zeitschrift fur Papyrologie und Epigraphik 205 77 91 JSTOR 26603971 Retrieved 10 September 2022 Sheldon Rose Mary 2003 The Sator Rebus An unsolved cryptogram Cryptologia 27 3 233 287 doi 10 1080 0161 110391891919 S2CID 218542154 Retrieved 10 September 2022 Fishwick Duncan 1959 An Early Christian Cryptogram PDF CCHA University of Manitoba 26 29 41 Retrieved 13 October 2021 a b Longest palindromic word Guinness World Records Retrieved 12 January 2017 Soclof Adam 28 December 2011 Jewish Wordplay Jewish Telegraphic Agency Retrieved 21 November 2016 S ilvanus Urban Classical Literature On Macaronic Poetry The Gentleman s Magazine or Monthly Intelligencer London 100 part 2 34 36 New Series 23 July 1830 Richard Lederer The Word Circus A Letter perfect Book 1998 ISBN 0877793549 p 54 On Palindromes The New Monthly Magazine 2 170 173 July December 1821 a b Ingenious Arrangement of Words The Gazette of the Union Golden Rule and Odd Fellows Family Companion 9 30 July 8 1848 Able Was I Ere I Saw Elba Quote Investigator September 15 2013 Doings in Baltimore Gazette of the Union Golden Rule and Odd fellows Family Companion 9 2 30 8 July 1848 By Leigh Mercer published in Notes and Queries 13 November 1948 according to The Yale Book of Quotations F R Shapiro ed 2006 ISBN 0 300 10798 6 Do you give it up A collection of the most amusing conundrums riddles etc of the day London 1861 p 4 Google nGrams frequencies Mark J Nelson 7 February 2012 Word unit palindromes Retrieved 18 November 2012 Never Odd Or Even and Other Tricks Words Can Do by O V Michaelsen Sterling Publishing Company New York 2005 p124 7 Cilleruelo Javier Luca Florian Baxter Lewis 19 February 2016 Every positive integer is a sum of three palindromes arXiv 1602 06208 math NT Universal Palindrome Day 2 February 2020 PalindromeDay Geeks around the world celebrate 02 02 2020 BBC 2 February 2020 Held Amy 2 February 2020 Why A Day Like Sunday Hasn t Been Seen In 900 Years NPR Goertz Karein K 2003 Showing Her Colors An Afro German Writes the Blues in Black and White Callaloo 26 2 306 319 doi 10 1353 cal 2003 0045 JSTOR 3300855 S2CID 161346520 Durand Gerard 2003 Palindromes en Folie Les Dossiers de l Aquitaine p 32 ISBN 978 2846220361 Section titled On Burroughs and Burrows Pfony com Retrieved 23 April 2012 Reversible audio cut ups of William S Burroughs voice Archived 13 March 2008 at the Wayback Machine including an acoustic palindrome in example 5 requires Flash Michaelsen O V 1998 Words at play quips quirks and oddities Sterling OED 17 September 2015 The longest palindrome defined in the OED is tattarrattat meaning a knock at the door It was used by James Joyce in Ulysses 2 2 Tweet via Twitter James Joyce 1982 Ulysses Editions Artisan Devereaux pp 434 ISBN 978 1 936694 38 9 I was just beginning to yawn with nerves thinking he was trying to make a fool of me when I knew his tattarrattat at the door he must O A Booty 1 January 2002 Funny Side of English Pustak Mahal pp 203 ISBN 978 81 223 0799 3 The longest palindromic word in English has 12 letters tattarrattat This word appearing in the Oxford English Dictionary was invented by James Joyce and used in his book Ulysses 1922 and is an imitation of the sound of someone Professor Peter Hilton Daily Telegraph London 10 November 2010 Retrieved 30 April 2011 By Brendan Gill published in Here At The New Yorker 1997 ISBN 0 306 80810 2 Eckler Ross 1996 Making the Alphabet Dance NY St Martin s p 36 ISBN 978 0 333 90334 6 Demetri Martin s Palindrome Yale University Mathematics Department Archived from the original on 29 June 2010 Retrieved 17 February 2014 Twardzik Tom 25 October 2016 Celebrate Bob Dylan s Nobel with Weird Al Popdust Retrieved 15 June 2021 Lulu British Library Retrieved 7 August 2021 A helpful list is at http deconstructing jim blogspot com 2010 03 musical palindromes html Answers com Answers com Retrieved 23 April 2012 Rudolf Frisius Karlheinz Stockhausen II Die Werke 1950 1977 Gesprach mit Karlheinz Stockhausen Es geht aufwarts Mainz London Berlin Madrid New York Paris Prague Tokyo Toronto Schott Musik International 2008 164 65 ISBN 978 3 7957 0249 6 M orag J osephine Grant Serial Music Serial Aesthetics Compositional Theory in Post war Europe Cambridge U K New York Cambridge University Press 2001 64 65 Charton Shawn E Jennens vs Handel Decoding the Mysteries of Messiah Benjamin Thomas 2003 The Craft of Tonal Counterpoint New York Routledge p 120 ISBN 0 415 94391 4 Retrieved 14 April 2011 2003 Release Mechanism Preserves Y Chromosome Gene National Human Genome Research Institute NHGRI Retrieved 21 November 2017 Ohno S 1990 Intrinsic evolution of proteins The role of peptidic palindromes Riv Biol 83 2 3 287 91 405 10 PMID 2128128 Giel Pietraszuk M Hoffmann M Dolecka S Rychlewski J Barciszewski J February 2003 Palindromes in proteins J Protein Chem 22 2 109 13 doi 10 1023 A 1023454111924 PMID 12760415 S2CID 28294669 Archived from the original PDF on 14 December 2019 Retrieved 17 February 2011 a b Sheari A Kargar M Katanforoush A et al 2008 A tale of two symmetrical tails structural and functional characteristics of palindromes in proteins BMC Bioinformatics 9 274 doi 10 1186 1471 2105 9 274 PMC 2474621 PMID 18547401 Pinotsis N Wilmanns M October 2008 Protein assemblies with palindromic structure motifs Cell Mol Life Sci 65 19 2953 6 doi 10 1007 s00018 008 8265 1 PMID 18791850 S2CID 29569626 a b Crochemore Maxime Rytter Wojciech 2003 8 1 Searching for symmetric words Jewels of Stringology Text Algorithms World Scientific pp 111 114 ISBN 978 981 02 4897 0 Gusfield Dan 1997 9 2 Finding all maximal palindromes in linear time Algorithms on Strings Trees and Sequences Cambridge Cambridge University Press pp 197 199 doi 10 1017 CBO9780511574931 ISBN 978 0 521 58519 4 MR 1460730 Adamczewski Boris Bugeaud Yann 2010 8 Transcendence and diophantine approximation in Berthe Valerie Rigo Michael eds Combinatorics automata and number theory Encyclopedia of Mathematics and its Applications vol 135 Cambridge Cambridge University Press p 443 ISBN 978 0 521 51597 9 Zbl 1271 11073Further reading EditWord Ways The Journal of Recreational Linguistics Greenwood Periodicals et al 1968 ISSN 0043 7980 The Palindromist Palindromist Press 1996 Howard W Bergerson Palindromes and Anagrams Dover Publications 1973 ISBN 978 0486206646 Dmitri A Borgman Language on Vacation Charles Scribner s Sons 1965 ISBN 978 0006523086 Stephen J Chism From A to Zotamorf The Dictionary of Palindromes Word Ways Press 1992 ISBN 978 0963515209 Michael Donner I Love Me Vol I S Wordrow s Palindrome Encyclopedia Algonquin Books 1996 ISBN 978 1565121096 External links Edit Look up palindrome or Appendix English palindromes in Wiktionary the free dictionary Wikiquote has quotations related to Palindrome Wikimedia Commons has media related to Palindromes Chisholm Hugh ed 1911 Palindrome Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 20 11th ed Cambridge University Press p 633 Palindromes Several languages European Day of Languages EDL Celebrated Sep 26 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Palindrome amp oldid 1135184961, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.