Many of the new palindromes listed in The Palindromicon II (Jeff Grant and Dan Tilque, Word Ways Monograph Series 6, 2002) will, undoubtedly, find their way into Word Ways. The longer palindromes, especially when they are solid words, have a special appeal due to their sheer length. After reading through The Palindromicon II, however, I found my thoughts swelling on the more humble, 5-letter. palindromes
Many years ago, Leigh Mercer constructed several dictionaries to aid the aspiring palindromist. In t...
Palindroming is such an unnatural occupation that it is extremely hard to make an intelligible pal o...
In a May 1991 Word Ways article entitled Palindromic Construction , I explained how many palindromi...
The November 1973 issue of Word Ways comments on the relative paucity of new word palindromes in the...
Since The Palindromicon was produced back in 1991, Dan Tilque and I have been searching for new \u27...
The Palindromicon contains over 2300 palindromic words and names drawn from a wide variety of source...
For some time I have been looking out for long palindromic words in the Oxford English Dictionary. I...
In the November 1982 issue of Word Ways, I exhibited a palindromic alphabetic insertion based on AA,...
Palindromes are words or phrases endowed with a quirkish trait. They read the same frontward or bac...
Towering above all other features of the logological landscape are palindromes. Enveloped in a majes...
A palindrome that contains every letter of the alphabet is called a palindromic pangram. In Dmitri B...
I have never understood all of the interest in finding palindromic words. It requires no imaginatio...
Most Word Ways readers are attuned to letter-patterns. One of the most commonly-encountered ones is...
The following palindromes are additional to those listed in Palindromicon II. Although I have remov...
A word such as CIVIC, ROTATOR, or SEMITIMES, that is spelled exactly the same way backward as it is ...
Many years ago, Leigh Mercer constructed several dictionaries to aid the aspiring palindromist. In t...
Palindroming is such an unnatural occupation that it is extremely hard to make an intelligible pal o...
In a May 1991 Word Ways article entitled Palindromic Construction , I explained how many palindromi...
The November 1973 issue of Word Ways comments on the relative paucity of new word palindromes in the...
Since The Palindromicon was produced back in 1991, Dan Tilque and I have been searching for new \u27...
The Palindromicon contains over 2300 palindromic words and names drawn from a wide variety of source...
For some time I have been looking out for long palindromic words in the Oxford English Dictionary. I...
In the November 1982 issue of Word Ways, I exhibited a palindromic alphabetic insertion based on AA,...
Palindromes are words or phrases endowed with a quirkish trait. They read the same frontward or bac...
Towering above all other features of the logological landscape are palindromes. Enveloped in a majes...
A palindrome that contains every letter of the alphabet is called a palindromic pangram. In Dmitri B...
I have never understood all of the interest in finding palindromic words. It requires no imaginatio...
Most Word Ways readers are attuned to letter-patterns. One of the most commonly-encountered ones is...
The following palindromes are additional to those listed in Palindromicon II. Although I have remov...
A word such as CIVIC, ROTATOR, or SEMITIMES, that is spelled exactly the same way backward as it is ...
Many years ago, Leigh Mercer constructed several dictionaries to aid the aspiring palindromist. In t...
Palindroming is such an unnatural occupation that it is extremely hard to make an intelligible pal o...
In a May 1991 Word Ways article entitled Palindromic Construction , I explained how many palindromi...