Palindrome
A palindrome is a word, sentence, or number that reads the same from left to right as from right to left.[1][2] Punctuation does not matter, but letters and digits do. All alphabetic languages have palindromes. The first palindrome was the Latin Sator Square, which reads:

You can read it horizontally, backwards, even vertically!
Examples of Palindromes
    
    Words
    
- Mum
 - Dad
 - Deed
 - Level
 - Radar
 - Kayak
 - Eye
 - Madam
 - Rotor
 
Sentences
    
- Was it a cat I saw?
 - Do geese see God?
 - Rats live on no evil star.
 - Never odd or even.
 - Madam, I'm Adam.
 - Go Hang a salami I'm a lasagna hog
 - Top spot
 - Nurses run
 
Numbers
    
- 1881[1]
 - 1991
 - 2002
 
References
    
- Palindrome. Merriam-Webster. Retrieved 4 December 2020.
 - Palindrome. Definition at Encyclopaedia Britannica.
 
Related pages
    
    
Other websites
    
    
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