Jinxi is a...

mom, wife, writer, vegan, collector of ink, swimmer, freethinker, hiker, artist, word lover, music addict, baker of sweet treats; and advocate of the idea that sometimes it is good to pause in your pursuit of happiness and just be happy! Read More...

Enter your email address:

Delivered by FeedBurner


Entries in palindrome (1)

Saturday
Nov282009

Palindrome: What It Is, Origin Of and Fun Examples

A palindrome is a word, line, verse, number, or sentence that reads the same backward as it does forward. Like:

  • Never odd or even.
  • Dammit, I'm mad!

SotadesThe third century BCE Greek poet Sotades was said to have written such vulgar satires that King Ptolemy II had him sewn up in a sack and thrown into the sea, for insulting the king in one of his verses. But his coarse, vile verses must have been clever, for Sotades is reputed to have invented palindromes, which are sometimes called Sotadics in his honor.

Palindromes take their more common name from the Greek palin dromo, which means "running back again," and they are simply anagrams that read the same backward as forward.

Making palindromes has been a favorite word game since at least early Grecian times. English, with the largest and most varied vocabulary of all languages, offers the most viable ground for creating palindromes.

It is said that Sir Thomas Urquhart even invented a universal language based entirely on palindromes.

Thomas Urquhart

Another famous palindrome is the one English author Leigh Mercer wrote for Ferdinand de Lesseps, the man who began the Panama Canal:

A man, a plan, a canal: Panama!