Log In
Create Account
SlickerTalk
Search Archives
The Leaderboard
The FAQ
Login
Create Account
Search
Dr. S. Talk
TT/ST Wiki
How Well Do You Know ...
RSS Feed
Hosting by DigitalOcean
Support ST on Ko-Fi
Links Only
50 Results
100 Results
250 Results
500 Results
1000 Results
5000 Results
2 Weeks
2 Months
6 Months
1 Year
2 Years
5 Years
All Time
Live
Down to Post
Backboards:
Live
________________
1: Nov 30, 15:54
2: Nov 30, 09:41
3: Nov 29, 16:44
4: Nov 29, 08:01
5: Nov 28, 16:19
6: Nov 28, 09:42
7: Nov 27, 18:07
8: Nov 27, 12:04
9: Nov 27, 08:26
10: Nov 26, 18:06
11: Nov 26, 12:05
12: Nov 26, 08:29
13: Nov 25, 18:33
14: Nov 25, 11:12
15: Nov 25, 07:08
16: Nov 24, 13:17
17: Nov 23, 18:13
18: Nov 23, 06:17
19: Nov 22, 13:24
20: Nov 22, 09:09
Posts: 154
Are palindromes a thing in languages other than English? -- nm
Posted by
TWuG
Sep 11 '14, 13:56
(No message)
Responses:
Amó la paloma -- nm
-
CQ
Sep 11, 14:02
I imagine that they would be rather difficult in Chinese or Japanese characters, but could be done in most other languages -- nm
-
zork
Sep 11, 14:02
2
Huh - Japanese has a similar concept -- (link)
-
Roger More
Sep 11, 14:06
1
interestnig but those are based on syllables so I wonder if they are easier -- nm
-
zork
Sep 11, 14:10
"ABBA's song "SOS" is the only Billboard Hot 100 single to have both a title and a recording artist whose names are both palindromes."
-
Max
Sep 11, 14:02
Latin (sator square) -- nm
-
Roger More
Sep 11, 13:59
3
wiki has examples in Greek, Arabic, Hebrew, Persian, Sanskrit... so I guess any written language that uses an alphabet -- (link)
-
Roger More
Sep 11, 14:03
2
Cool. Thank you. :-) -- nm
-
TWuG
Sep 11, 14:09
You know what we really want are links to some bad foreign detective shows where palindromes help lead to the killer -- nm
-
con_carne
Sep 11, 14:07
Post a message
top
Replies are disabled on threads older than 7 days.