Numerologists will remember 2002 as a palindrome, the last year until 2112 that can be written the same way backward or forward. |
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I was too pleased with my own hard-won epiphany that the film's title is a palindrome to even notice that the credits had started rolling. |
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He wanted to explore the idea of what a palindrome is, at least metaphorically speaking. |
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What he admired in these poets was their inventive use of word and sound in every device of onomatopoeia, alliteration, pun and palindrome. |
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The mood changes are subtle, yet significant, between songs and the album as a whole forms a palindrome, tonally, like its title. |
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The structure of the palindrome was confirmed by extensive restriction mapping and sequencing. |
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Every time I tell someone my name is Hannah, they tell me that it's a palindrome, as though I didn't already know. |
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In fact, as aficionados of the English language will know, a palindrome is a word whose letters spell the same forwards as backwards. |
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A palindrome is a word, phrase, or sentence which reads the same backwards and forwards. |
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Lack of extrusion of the palindrome may explain why it was not deleted from the chromosomal locus during growth of the recombinants. |
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This is accompanied by music that, at its midpoint, turns completely around and becomes its own retrograde, a musical palindrome running back to its beginning. |
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Another good word game is to find a phrase that is a palindrome. |
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Our very perception of the landscape between cities is transformed into that of an extended palindrome. |
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Xiffix is a palindrome, a symmetrical word that reads the same from left to right as it does from right to left. |
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Flemlose Stone 2: ruulfRsis: the name Roulf followed by the palindrome sis, certainly a magical formula. |
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The earliest known example of the Sator square, a Latin palindrome consisting of the words SATOR AREPO TENET OPERA ROTAS, was found scratched on a wall in the buried Roman town of Pompeii. |
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Thus the palindrome, now merely a game, had a serious beginning. |
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Between the trace and the gap, itself a palindrome full of meaning, Michael Jarrell's piece weaves its way by means of returning, repeating, leaving and forgetting. |
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Obviously, such a felicific coincidence cries out for both terms to be featured together in the same palindrome, but first things first. |
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Like the search for the perfect palindrome, the pursuit of the perfect pangram has obsessed many people. |
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In this case, the middle phonetic symbol must represent at least 2 letters, and these must not be the same letter otherwise the word itself would be a palindrome. |
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While some people recognise a palindrome when they see one, fewer realise that a palindrome is a special case of a pattern and that these patterns are all around. |
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Palindrome is doing his best to explain why my broadband connection is rubbish. |
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