palindrome
See also: Palindrome
English
Etymology
From Ancient Greek παλίνδρομος (palíndromos, “running back again”), from πάλιν (pálin, “back, again, back again”) + δρόμος (drómos, “running, race, racecourse”)
Pronunciation
- (Received Pronunciation) IPA(key): /ˈpælɪndɹəʊm/
- (US) IPA(key): /ˈpælɪndɹoʊm/
Audio (US) (file)
Noun
palindrome (plural palindromes)
- A word, phrase, number or any other sequence of units which has the property of reading the same forwards as it does backwards, character for character, sometimes disregarding punctuation, capitalization and diacritics.
- “Rise to vote sir” is an example of a sentence that is a palindrome.
- Level, madam and racecar are examples of single word palindromes.
- (by extension) A poetic form in which the sequence of words reads the same in either direction.
- (genetics) A stretch of DNA in which the sequence of nucleotides on one strand are in the reverse order to that of the complementary strand
Derived terms
- (genetics): massive palindrome
Translations
a sequence of units that reads the same forwards as backwards
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See also
French
Etymology
From Ancient Greek πάλιν (pálin, “again”) + -drome "course", "road".
Further reading
- “palindrome” in le Trésor de la langue française informatisé (The Digitized Treasury of the French Language).
Italian
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