PALINDROMES: The world's longest, oldest & most impressive

Поделиться
HTML-код
  • Опубликовано: 12 июн 2024
  • If you like wordplay, you'll love this brief guide to palindromes: words and phrases that say the same thing forwards & backwards (think "wow", "RADAR" or... "taco cat").
    What's the longest palindrome in English? What's the longest in any language? What's the oldest palindrome we've found? And what does it have to do with the movie Tenet? I'll answer these questions and more.
    Including...
    🔠 What is the Sator square?
    🖊 What is a "palindromist"?
    🖊 What was the best palindrome of 2020?
    🖊 What palindromes to French, Spanish, Italian, Russian and Chinese have to offer?
    🖊 What's the longest word with rotational symmetry?
    🖊 What's the longest word with reflective symmetry?
    🖊 What is a semordnilap?
    Check me out on Twitter & TikTok:
    / robwordsyt​​
    / robwords
    ==CHAPTERS==
    0:00 Intro - What is a palindrome?
    0:46 Longest palindrome words in English
    1:32 Palindrom phrases - Elba & Panama
    3:05 Palindrome poem - Dammit I'm Mad
    3:30 The palindromists
    4:00 2020's best palindromes
    4:49 World's oldest palindrome - Sator square
    5:53 Tenet and the Sator square
    6:25 World's oldest - Le Grand Palindrome
    7:05 Spanish, Italian, Russian & Chinese
    8:00 Symmetrical words
    9:05 Semordnilap
    9:22 Goodbye
  • РазвлеченияРазвлечения

Комментарии • 2,4 тыс.

  • @tocaat2410
    @tocaat2410 Год назад +548

    My favourite (found on line several years ago) is:
    Gert, I saw Ron avoid a radio van, or was it Reg?
    Another favourite was given to me by a friend:
    Doc note, I dissent. A fast never prevents a fatness. I diet on cod.
    The most cringeworthy one I found on line was:
    Did I strap red nude, red rump, also slap murdered underparts? I did! 😫
    A few others, courtesy of Bill Bryson (some clever, some gratuitous):
    Was it Eliot's toilet I saw?
    Sex at noon taxes.
    Are we not drawn onward, we few, drawn onward to new era?
    Sums are not set as a test on Erasmus.
    Too far, Edna, we wander afoot.

    • @RobWords
      @RobWords  Год назад +59

      All glorious!

    • @rogink
      @rogink Год назад +8

      Those first few I can't help hearing in the voice of Barry Cryer :)

    • @tiyenin
      @tiyenin Год назад +9

      @@RobWords Sun Is Wolf; A Valhalla Allah Lava Flows In Us

    • @prajeeshprasannakumar
      @prajeeshprasannakumar Год назад +17

      MALAYALAM, a language using in Southern India is also a palindrome.

    • @rogink
      @rogink Год назад +5

      @@prajeeshprasannakumar But is that the name of language in that language? I suspect it doesn't use the Latin alphabet!

  • @thewebexpert3311
    @thewebexpert3311 Год назад +686

    Most impressive (to me, at least) is "Weird Al" Yankovic's song "Bob." Not only is the title a palindrome, the song is constructed exclusively out of palindromes - which he, the creative genius that he is, has caused to rhyme with near-perfection throughout the entire song.

    • @giftedunderachiever5919
      @giftedunderachiever5919 Год назад +61

      The best part for me was how long it took me to figure out what it was. I thought it was just Dylanesque nonsense until I started noticing patterns.

    • @JefAlanLong
      @JefAlanLong Год назад +19

      @@giftedunderachiever5919 me too! I had the album for years and then somehow saw the music video one day, the video makes it quite obvious. Felt more than a little foolish

    • @jackpfefferkorn3734
      @jackpfefferkorn3734 Год назад +63

      Best line in the song is "Go hang a salami, I'm a lasagna hog!". Al's delivery is just impeccable.

    • @reubenmckay
      @reubenmckay Год назад +22

      The sheer genius of that song (and Weird Al as an artist in general) cannot be understated.

    • @DRWDesigns
      @DRWDesigns Год назад +18

      And the video is a prefect parody of Subterranean Homesick Blues.

  • @amilgz
    @amilgz 2 года назад +738

    There's a Galician book called “A torre da derrota” (The tower of defeat), by Gonzalo Navaza. It's a poetry book, and all of the poems are palindromes. 😊

    • @slohmann1572
      @slohmann1572 Год назад +34

      That works in Portuguese too :) By the way, we have this: “Socorram-me, subi no ônibus em Marrocos”.

    • @amilgz
      @amilgz Год назад +16

      @@slohmann1572 Well, I'm a reintegrationist, I defend that Galician and Portuguese are one and the same. 😊

    • @alanr4447a
      @alanr4447a Год назад +5

      Strap racecar parts!

    • @rhombicuboctahedron7811
      @rhombicuboctahedron7811 Год назад +1

      @@slohmann1572 cool

    • @kellytozarindamasceno6709
      @kellytozarindamasceno6709 Год назад +2

      In Portuguese is exact the same.

  • @FinFan94
    @FinFan94 Год назад +169

    Finnish has A LOT of palindromes and a few quite popular radio hosts used to have a 'palindrome of the week'. Few classics are "saippuakauppias" (a soap sales man) "innostunut sonni" (exited bull) and my favorite that i can remember "iso ja hatara ruma rata hajosi" (a large and unstable ugly railway collapsed). The last one makes perfect sense!

    • @KolonE
      @KolonE Год назад +14

      Vielä parempi ois "saippuakivikauppias" nii siitä saa vähä pitemmäm :)

    • @MetallicMutalisk
      @MetallicMutalisk Год назад +9

      Solutomaattimittaamotulos - cell tomato measuring centre result.
      Oma lemppari on kuitenkin "saippuakullipyllypillukauppias"

    • @mikitz
      @mikitz Год назад +3

      "Naamiokalle, mene mellakoimaan."

    • @jscire__872
      @jscire__872 11 месяцев назад +4

      My favorite one in Finnish is ”Neulo taas niin saat oluen” which means ”Go knit again and you’ll get a beer”😂🧶

    • @random_Finnish_guy
      @random_Finnish_guy 9 месяцев назад +1

      Yes, there are a lot of funny palindromes in Finnish.

  • @apoolplayer278
    @apoolplayer278 Год назад +8

    Is it crazy how saying sentences backwards creates backwards sentences saying how crazy it is?

  • @dopebeatstudios
    @dopebeatstudios Год назад +477

    One example of a Greek palindrome which has a real meaning and is not only words
    "νίψον ανομήματα μη μόναν όψιν"
    which translates as
    "wash off your sins, not only your face"

    • @DJruslan4ic
      @DJruslan4ic Год назад +27

      There was a russian meme with a picture of Housemade soap with a caption in russian "Can even wash off your sins!"

    • @Giannis_Sarafis
      @Giannis_Sarafis Год назад +16

      I believe it was first sculpted on a fountain (fyali or perirantirion) sited in the yard of the church of Agia Sophia in Constantinople (nowadays Istanbul). After that, it is quite common to be found on founts of orthodox churches.

    • @robertchambers8725
      @robertchambers8725 Год назад +9

      Many years ago I saw it in the Guinness Book of Records as probably the oldest palindrome. But I guess earlier ones have been discovered now.

    • @pattysherwood7091
      @pattysherwood7091 Год назад +4

      @@Giannis_Sarafis yes, at Hagia Sophia. My favorite palindrome

    • @TheRootedWord
      @TheRootedWord Год назад +5

      The words is not exactly "sins" but rather "lawless deeds". They are not the same.

  • @daviddeming218
    @daviddeming218 2 года назад +364

    For forty years I worked as a bus driver and would often spend my time at stop lights creating palindromes. Working from an already created palindrome, "Eva can I stab bats in a cave?" Here we have a nested palindrome. If you insert a verb/object pair that is itself a palindrome you build new ones, all starting with "Eva can I ... ending with ... in a cave?" So one could insert "stir grits" or even "evade Dave" /// Very cool to see Graham Maddocks entry in these comments: Eva can ignite virtuosos out riveting in a cave.

    • @RobWords
      @RobWords  2 года назад +49

      This is marvellous, thanks!

    • @alfonsofrontera6425
      @alfonsofrontera6425 Год назад +20

      Stressed desserts!

    • @timc5768
      @timc5768 Год назад +28

      @@alfonsofrontera6425 Stressed? No tips? Spit on desserts. (Not my creation)

    • @alfonsofrontera6425
      @alfonsofrontera6425 Год назад +14

      @@timc5768 Stressed? No tips? Bob, spit on desserts!

    • @timc5768
      @timc5768 Год назад +8

      @@alfonsofrontera6425 Nice ! Maybe Hannah spits longer!

  • @Ghiaman1334
    @Ghiaman1334 Год назад +49

    I've always thought the word for palindromes should have been a palindrome in itself. Knowing 'Palinilap' is now actually a thing, that leaves the ever powerful sounding 'semordromes', though a single one would have to be an 'emordrome' to preserve this quality

    • @alveolate
      @alveolate Год назад +1

      i 100% second this notion!

    • @todortodorov940
      @todortodorov940 Год назад +3

      But then we also need to replace the word *abbreviation* with something shorter.

    • @Ghiaman1334
      @Ghiaman1334 Год назад +4

      @@todortodorov940 No, we just need to refer to it by an abbreviation, like abb. or brev.

    • @thevalarauka101
      @thevalarauka101 5 месяцев назад +1

      @@Ghiaman1334 I think abbr. or abbrev. is the usual one in dictionaries?

  • @friederike114
    @friederike114 Год назад +17

    Hi Rob,
    German here :)
    2nd: Otto of course is a name, which means... Otto. Haha. No, it actually has a "real" meaning which is "eight". Originating in Italian (or is it even Latin?). And that again opens up a whole other world with "8" having such beautiful symmetry horizontally and vertically - as well as allowing for endless movement.
    1st: "Pils mit Bier treibt im Slip" actually does make sense. "Treiben" has various meanings - one being " to float" but another one being "to urge". So, it means "A lot of beer makes you have to pee".
    Lastly: I really enjoy your videos! Thank you!!

    • @angreagach
      @angreagach 6 месяцев назад

      You stole my thunder!

  • @RobPudWilliams
    @RobPudWilliams Год назад +79

    The marketplace outside the palace in Ankh Morpork in Terry Pratchett's Discworld is called Sator Square. Now I know why.

    • @OtakuUnitedStudio
      @OtakuUnitedStudio Год назад +9

      Sir Terry was never the kind to turn down the opportunity to throw in a quick Pune, or play on words.

    • @Vandal_Savage
      @Vandal_Savage Год назад +2

      This was the comment I was looking for - knew I wouldn't be disappointed 😊

    • @w.reidripley1968
      @w.reidripley1968 Год назад +1

      @@OtakuUnitedStudio Uh, oh, Punic Wars. (No, that isn't one, stop staring...)

    • @meganofsherwood3665
      @meganofsherwood3665 Год назад +1

      ...that makes so much more sense now!

  • @owhite2445
    @owhite2445 3 года назад +363

    most underrated channel on youtube. this guy is the Brian Cox of the english language

    • @RobWords
      @RobWords  3 года назад +51

      Wow, I'll take that! Thanks for watching.

    • @der.Schtefan
      @der.Schtefan 3 года назад +7

      I agree

    • @brienfoaboutanything9037
      @brienfoaboutanything9037 2 года назад

      Wikipedia about Palindrome: ruclips.net/video/EzaJ8qI58LQ/видео.html

    • @illogicmath
      @illogicmath 2 года назад +6

      @@RobWords
      I just saw you on Deutsche Welle giving some opinions on the collapse of the Turkish lira.

    • @Mylca
      @Mylca Год назад +3

      I can't help but agree! For long, I thought he was at at least 100k subs. But he's not even at 10k. I love his content, and I'm sure quite a lot of people would if RUclips did its magic with its algorithm wand!

  • @bouboulroz
    @bouboulroz Год назад +45

    Fun little fact: Georges Perrec, the author of Le Grand Palindrome, was specialized in writting with multiple constraints (he was even part of a community dedicaded to that kind of exercise). His most known work is "La Vie mode d'emploi" (Life: A User's Manual) written multiple constraints. Another notable work is "La Disparition" (A Void) which doesn't use the letter e (very hard to do in a lot of languages, and French is definitiely one of them).

    • @dariusdaguerre3535
      @dariusdaguerre3535 Год назад +1

      If you love English, you'll stop using "multiple" so much, which has begun to displace _many,_ _several,_ _numerous,_ _countless,_ and other words.

    • @bouboulroz
      @bouboulroz Год назад +5

      @@dariusdaguerre3535 Good thing I don't love english then.

    • @dariusdaguerre3535
      @dariusdaguerre3535 Год назад

      @@bouboulroz The wasting of mind is never a good thing. I recommend two hours a day with Mencken or Pauline Kael or Pope every day for a fortnight until you begin to feel less cranky and witless.
      Of course, I'm not sure how you can appreciate Perec or anyone else in Oulipo if you can't understand that, in order for constraints to be productive, you must have an extraordinary command of language.
      But you unknowingly have been made to suffer _une disparition_ that is far deadlier than the vanishing of that fabled something up the fundus of Edward II. See how you fume?

    • @bouboulroz
      @bouboulroz Год назад +7

      @@dariusdaguerre3535 Did you ignore my obvious dismissiveness on purpose just to satisfy your need of producing a pompuous rant, or are you so dense it was wasted on you ?
      If it's the latter, then let me clarify: I'm not interested in debating the richness (or lack thereof) of my vocabulary in a language that's not even my native one, particularly in a comment thread I started 7 months ago.

    • @dariusdaguerre3535
      @dariusdaguerre3535 Год назад +1

      @@bouboulroz I thought that you were a typical American who has lost a sense of the power of English, the language that has the largest vocabulary of any that has ever existed, and who might have noticed, as I've seen some ordinary RUclipsrs notice, the proliferation of meaningless or wordy expressions like "in terms of" or "have a lack of."
      And I thought that, if a person is interested enough in language to watch a video on palindromes, and is interested enough in literature to know about Georges Perec, they would most likely take my initial comment with delighted surprise.
      For instance, I know ancient Greek, and once, in speaking with a Greek friend, he pointed out to me that I pronounced the word "hosios" with a medial sounded hard s, which isn't a variant in Greek-and I was both shocked and delighted: shocked because in twenty years nobody had ever corrected me, and delighted because my friend is just the sort of person who would notice that sort of thing.
      And again, still thinking you were an American, I answered you the second time the way I did because I am intolerant of militant ignorance-and again, I thought that someone who, etc., might be shocked into wondering what they would find in the authors I recommended in light of my comments.
      So I owe you an apology. I'm sorry that you don't care enough about English to care about a fine mastery of it, but foreigners who pick up bad linguistic habits-and I'm not saying this as an oblique aspersion on you, because for you it is _not_ a bad habit, it just is for native speakers of English-aren't the object of my contempt, and don't deserve to be subjected to it.
      Go in peace.

  • @lucasfmusic5684
    @lucasfmusic5684 Год назад +24

    it annoys me that “palindrome” is not palindromic

    • @eugenepolan1750
      @eugenepolan1750 23 дня назад

      ...and I that abbreviated is such a long word.

  • @worldsedge4991
    @worldsedge4991 Год назад +98

    On Netflix is a new Korean language show, “Extraordinary Attorney Woo” about a young woman attorney with autism spectrum disorder. Her name, Woo Young-Woo is palindromic, “우영우”. She also has a habit when introducing herself by noting her name is the same coming or going and then rattles off a list of palindromes. These are translated in subtitles as “Kayak, deed, rotator…” obviously, these English palindromes don’t work in Korean. She actually says “기러기, 토마토, 스위스…” (goose, tomato, Swiss…)

    • @Binkles
      @Binkles Год назад +3

      Thanks so much for the pointer; I’m streaming it now. I appreciate it! 💋

    • @worldsedge4991
      @worldsedge4991 Год назад

      @@Binkles Oh, good. It is totally worth watching!

    • @BJGvideos
      @BJGvideos Год назад +3

      That's an odd thing to translate thing as. Surely any reading audience would understand "oh these must be palindromes in Korean"

    • @Binkles
      @Binkles Год назад +3

      @@worldsedge4991 It sure is! The actress playing Woo Young-Woo is sooo adorable she brings tears to my eyes! Am unsure about the ginormous clothes they put her in and the awkward way they make her walk, but perhaps I haven’t met enough autistic people to know that that’s authentic? Still, they don’t detract from such a darling actress (and character!). I’ve been having a blast watching the show and am sad that the season finale is apparently next; rats. I’d be perfectly happy if it were on weekly 52 weeks a year!
      I really appreciate the pointer, @wordsedge; I hate to think that I coulda missed it!

    • @Binkles
      @Binkles Год назад +6

      @@BJGvideos Unfortunately, in my vast experience, the average American doesn’t know what a palindrome is. 😞 And the word “pailndrome” isn’t used on the show (in the English subtitles, I mean) so had they gone with “goose, tomato, Swiss,” the average American viewer is likely to be confused. I think it was a good idea to show American palindromes so that those average viewers would catch on: “Oh! She means words that are the same forwards and backwards!” because Americans know that they exist, even if they don’t know what to call ‘em. 😕

  • @SimonCharman
    @SimonCharman Год назад +115

    “Step on no pets” is one that comes to mind when taking about palindromes. It is also useful advice … especially if you own a hamster. Love your channel. I have binge watched.

    • @JohnLeePettimoreIII
      @JohnLeePettimoreIII Год назад +3

      thank you for spelling "hamster" properly. most people try to spell it "hamPster". it drives me nuts when i see it spelled that way.

    • @TekkenGirl4Lyfe
      @TekkenGirl4Lyfe Год назад +5

      Also useful advice for cat owners bc the silly things tend to get underfoot.

    • @Lily-Bravo
      @Lily-Bravo Год назад +1

      @@TekkenGirl4Lyfe Underfoot? My lumpen feline is making typing difficult by sitting on me.

    • @alanr4447a
      @alanr4447a Год назад +6

      @@JohnLeePettimoreIII I assumed a "hamster" was a pork advocate... 😜

    • @JohnLeePettimoreIII
      @JohnLeePettimoreIII Год назад +2

      @@alanr4447a ok now... that was funny.

  • @epiendless1128
    @epiendless1128 Год назад +13

    The song 'Tenet' by Heilung is based on the Sator square.
    The melody itself is somehow derived from the square. I'm not sufficiently musically literate to understand what they did, but I'm sure it's frightfully clever.

  • @happybirch9663
    @happybirch9663 Год назад +7

    The first time I was introduced to palindrome was when I read an Indonesian riddle book. It was "kasur ini rusak" and means "this bed is broken". It was simple, but I was amazed.

  • @wassholm
    @wassholm Год назад +51

    Last fall I had the opportunity to work on a production of a play called "Are we not drawn onward to new erA". The whole show is actually a palindrome, created with the camera and projection, so you watch the whole thing forwards live, and then continue to watch the recording played backwards, back to the start. It's made by a Belgian company called Ontroerend Goed.

    • @dariusdaguerre3535
      @dariusdaguerre3535 Год назад +3

      I hate that one because it is ungrammatical-it's a cheat.

  • @untlacuache
    @untlacuache 3 года назад +297

    A fascinating Spanish fact
    Fear to palindromes is called "aibofobia" which is by itself a palindrome

    • @jmi5969
      @jmi5969 Год назад +25

      @Wendell Shorteyes Enter two little girls: "come play palindromes with us..."

    • @HerrHertzsprung
      @HerrHertzsprung Год назад +8

      Wow, I wasn't aware of a word for that. Fear of palindromes sounds like something medieval monks might suffer from... I mean, on account of the physical punishment they might get if they got their palindromes wrong.

    • @allanrichardson9081
      @allanrichardson9081 Год назад +30

      Sounds like someone created that word to be a palindrome!

    • @Frankie5Angels150
      @Frankie5Angels150 Год назад +3

      Fear of palindromes not fear to palindromes.

    • @JayBassoon
      @JayBassoon Год назад +13

      Fear of palindromes in English is known as "Aibohphobia". (¿Es reconocerse o no es reconocerse?)

  • @logminusone1272
    @logminusone1272 Год назад +14

    An Indian language spoken in the southern part of the country is called MALAYALAM. Now, that is a palindrome! A language whose name itself is a palindrome.
    In school, our favourite palindrome was, "Was it a car or a cat I saw?"

    • @angreagach
      @angreagach Месяц назад

      Answer: "No, miss. It is Simon." (I didn't make that up.)

  • @missmabelbasset4077
    @missmabelbasset4077 Год назад +12

    I once had the immense pleasure of a few hours, and a few glasses of wine with Howard Bergerson who wrote the 1,034 letter palindromic narrative poem "Edna Waterfall". Which is maybe the longest palindromic poem that actually tells a story, as opposed to a series of words type thing (even if it reads a little weird especially by the standards of the average english speaker). So that one is my favorite.
    I also like Mr owl ate my metal worm.

  • @TimwiTerby
    @TimwiTerby Год назад +123

    The longest single-word palindrome I’m aware of is “saippuakivikauppias”, which is Finnish for “soapstone dealer”.

    • @hansvanwynsberghe
      @hansvanwynsberghe Год назад +17

      in dutch you have: koortsmeetsysteemstrook which is longer. it means somtething like: a piece of paper used by a system to measure fever.

    • @MrJukeri
      @MrJukeri Год назад +4

      @@hansvanwynsberghe What is " a piece of paper used by a system to measure fever"? Is it a realt thing or only a "vocaburary trick" ?

    • @hansvanwynsberghe
      @hansvanwynsberghe Год назад +8

      @@MrJukeri it's both. In dutch you can join several words into one. For example a restaurant for children is a childrenrestaurant. There s no limit to how much 'ouns one can stacl ip i. One word, and sometimes you can also put ?adverbs? Into it. Like: brownbeansoupcancollectionexhibitionentryticket. The thing witk the palindrome koortsmeetsysteemstrook is that it could still be a real thing. Although I never saw a machine that checks fever and prints out the result. It is the longest palindrome in the dutch dictionary. There s a longer variation: legerkoortsmeetsysteemstrookregel. It gets very artificial. It means a rule on a piece of paper from a fever measuring system from the army.

    • @livedandletdie
      @livedandletdie Год назад +7

      @@hansvanwynsberghe It's the same system as Swedish, however, due to spelling rules in Swedish there aren't a lot of palindromes. Tillit is the longest single word palindrome in Swedish as far as I'm aware, it's trust in English. Despite being able to stack words on words just like German and Dutch.

    • @mariiris1403
      @mariiris1403 Год назад +4

      @@livedandletdie if you put an S on bouth ends of that word, you get the Norwegian name for the goldfinch: stillits.

  • @deniseg8174
    @deniseg8174 Год назад +109

    My grandfather was born in 1881 so in 1961 we had a birthday cake for him and I noticed how nice to be able to read it upside down. I was 9 and have been fascinated with palindromes since. Thanks for your channel!

    • @thisnicklldo
      @thisnicklldo Год назад +13

      I was about the same agein 1961 when my father pointed out to me that I should take note, this was the last time for more than 4000 years that a date would have rotational symmetry - intimations of mortality, at a very young age.

    • @ianhruday9584
      @ianhruday9584 Год назад +2

      @@thisnicklldo the number two has rotational symmetry on some digital displays.

    • @chicagotypewriter2094
      @chicagotypewriter2094 Год назад

      I found out about that an Encyclopedia Brown book! God I love that series!

    • @terryplatt8115
      @terryplatt8115 Год назад

      I always like to watch my digital projector clock show me a Bee Gees song title shortly after 10 every morning! Go figure that one out - should only take about ten minutes!

    • @asheep7797
      @asheep7797 Год назад

      @@ianhruday9584 then 2962 to 5002 would be a palindromic drought.

  • @seanhannan5415
    @seanhannan5415 Год назад +12

    "Top Spot" and "Mom" aren't only palindromes written but also phonetic palindromes so they would sound the same forward or backwards. Other phonetic palindromes but not written palindromes include the phrases "We, you", "Say yes", "No one", "New moon" and probably my favorite at letters 13-letters long "Secret Turkeys"

    • @bopmaster404
      @bopmaster404 4 месяца назад

      Your accent is american or canadian, isn't it?

    • @seanhannan5415
      @seanhannan5415 4 месяца назад

      @@bopmaster404 what region?

    • @bopmaster404
      @bopmaster404 4 месяца назад

      ​@@seanhannan5415 I don't want to go further with that because I meant it only because "secret turkeys" (which is a top notch phonetic palindrome in an american pronunciation) seems to be a bit off in a british accent and I dunno about "we, you" one (fwiw I'm an L2 speaker)

  • @fiddlevoice
    @fiddlevoice Год назад +18

    Years ago, I wrote a palindrome as follows: "'Tis in a potato pan I sit." A year or two after I'd written it, I found it in a collection of computer generated palindromes on the internet. This was, I think, in the 80s. So much for my aspirations of becoming a writer of palindromes!

    • @sonyasandoval1477
      @sonyasandoval1477 Год назад +4

      A variation of this is "Sit on a potato pan, Otis!"

  • @Baccatube79
    @Baccatube79 Год назад +71

    "Pils mit Bier treibt im Slip" actually means that beer and more beer gonna make you pee a lot. ("treiben" (related to English "to drive") has a lot of meanings, one if them is "to incite the miction".

    • @justus8675
      @justus8675 Год назад +4

      I hate it when people use quotes from other languages without understanding them. Thanks for correting him!

    • @parslara5367
      @parslara5367 Год назад +10

      @@justus8675 To be fair though, I didn't get that either (I had never heard it before). And yes, I'm German.

    • @justus8675
      @justus8675 Год назад +1

      @@parslara5367 Well I think if you put out information on the internet and have a bigger audience, you should check your facts! Especially if you make content on languages, you might need a native speaker for some odd cases. Even a community post beforehand to sort things out would have helped. On the one hand, it is no big thing, nothing i mind too much, but I am disappointed. A big youtuber on the internet should have standards on how to check their facts and those were not met in this particular case!
      I have never heard this quote before, I only know the basic "Von Bier musst du pissen" (beer makes you pee) which I'd consider common knowledge among the beer drinking countries.

    • @Vielenberg
      @Vielenberg Год назад

      Still gross

    •  11 месяцев назад

      @@parslara5367 Duden: "harntreibend". "treiben" hier is just a shortened form.

  • @theblogg9470
    @theblogg9470 Год назад +3

    Somewhat over 60 years ago, I found a set of these in a book. Each was couched in a little rhyme, explaining the (dubious) context. The only two I remember are "No sot, nor Ottawa law at Toronto, son" and "Stiff, O dairyman in a myriad of fits".

  • @rowenagibson9592
    @rowenagibson9592 Год назад +1

    Hi Rob, I absolutely love the sator square. I find your content fascinating. Thank you for your dedication.

  • @gregorywehr3444
    @gregorywehr3444 Год назад +87

    I've always enjoyed "A man, a plan, a canal: Panama!" Also, the apocryphal Napoleanic "Able was I ere I saw Elba" and the even more licentious introduction in the Garden of Eden: "Madam, I'm Adam." When younger, I told a confused friend Anna that she, her Mom, Dad, Sis, and brother Bob were all palindromes. We also had a student at our school named Habibah, which was really cool. I think it was Willard R. Espy's book Words at Play that included most of these as well as this incantation: "LIVE, O DEVIL! REVEL EVER! LIVE! DO EVIL!" I'm afraid that given the state of the world now it might have worked.

    • @martifingers
      @martifingers Год назад +17

      And don't forget the reply to Adam was "Eve"!

    • @rparl
      @rparl Год назад +1

      It's possible that Words At Play is the book which I recalled as Language On Vacation. I'll have to check it out.

    • @Lucius1958
      @Lucius1958 Год назад +1

      @@martifingers Her proper reply was, "Name no one, man!"

  • @Fuff63
    @Fuff63 Год назад +19

    My Nephew, at 7 years old, told me about palindromes. He mentioned ‘Racecar’. I thought that was impressive…so yes, that is my favorite one. Enjoyed this. Cheers!

  • @WingedAsarath
    @WingedAsarath 10 месяцев назад +2

    I've loved the SATOR square ever since I first learnt about it as a kid! It roughly translates to: "The sower, Arepo, holds the wheels at work". One really interesting fact about it is that, despite the earliest known square predating 79AD, the letters can be rearranged to spell out PATER NOSTER in a cross shape, with two pairs of letters left over: A and O for alpha and omega - the beginning and the end.

  • @pprehn5268
    @pprehn5268 Год назад

    Glad you share your passion for words and language.

  • @hazelanderson1479
    @hazelanderson1479 Год назад +14

    “Never odd or even” is my favourite. Slightly off topic, we used to have a small round shallow baking tin with COOKIE impressed in the metal. If you looked either at the outside or inside, it read the same way.

  • @Susie_Floozie
    @Susie_Floozie Год назад +29

    Jon Agee wrote and illustrated several books of wonderfully limber palindromes with gloriously quirky titles like "GO HANG A SALAMI, I'M A LASAGNA HOG!" (my favorite), "SIT ON A POTATO PAN, OTIS!" and "SO MANY DYNAMOS!"

    • @OtakuUnitedStudio
      @OtakuUnitedStudio Год назад +1

      I had the first and last of those as a kid. Glad to see someone else got to experience them. :)

    • @rogerforsberg3910
      @rogerforsberg3910 Год назад +1

      I was about to add the first two of those palindromes to the comments when it occurred to me that someone must have arrived ahead of me. It was you, Mme F! It's encouraging to know that others are also fascinated by this sort of word play.

    • @Susie_Floozie
      @Susie_Floozie Год назад +1

      @@rogerforsberg3910 I worked as a library page to get by after my divorce--the only page not doing community service, haha. I reshelved Agee's books, and his titles intrigued me. I'd never have known about 'em without that job!

    • @Susie_Floozie
      @Susie_Floozie Год назад +2

      @@OtakuUnitedStudio I saw them as an adult and his stuff just slew me! Every so often, I'll raise my hands like the excited engineer in his drawing and say, "So many dynamos!" just for giggles.

  • @Flying-Bunny
    @Flying-Bunny Год назад +1

    A note on Georges Perec, the writer of "le grand palindrome", he also wrote an 300 pages long novel without ever using the letter "E". It's called "La disparition".

  • @przemysawdata6246
    @przemysawdata6246 Год назад +3

    In other languages there are also palindromes, i.e. in polish: "kajak" (canoe), "Ikar łapał raki" (Icarus has been catching loobsters), "kobyła ma mały bok" (a mare has a small side), "Zakopane na pokaz" (burried for a show or Zakopane* for a show), "Ada raportuje, że jutro parada" (Adriana reports, that is a parade tomorow). And the longest polish and also worldwide palindrome was created by Tadeusz Morawski and it's called "Żartem w metraż" (Joking in a metrage.") This palindrome contains over 33k characters.
    *Zakopane is a city in Lesser-Polish voivodship, in Tatra Mountains, called "winter capital of Poland"

    • @janszwyngel4820
      @janszwyngel4820 2 месяца назад

      i was surprised that searching for "longest palindrome in the world" didn't show "Żartem w metraż", the english wikipedia page for palindrome doesn't mention it either.

  • @dams0001
    @dams0001 Год назад +52

    It will be fun to have a video on Spoonerisms - real ones and those concocted later. Many of the latter are quite ingenious, but some original ones are truly hard to beat in hilarity, like "You hissed my mystery lecture"!

    • @alanr4447a
      @alanr4447a Год назад +1

      You have tasted two worms.

    • @helendale7668
      @helendale7668 Год назад +10

      A long time ago there was a "Two Ronnies" sketch (BBC , 70's) where the wife of Mr Spooner (who spoke in nothing but but spoonerisms), finally broke down crying "I can't spoon any more standarisms!"

    • @suzannepottsshorts
      @suzannepottsshorts Год назад +3

      Fitted sheets

    • @zappababe8577
      @zappababe8577 Год назад +10

      "The Lord is a shoving leopard"
      "You have tasted two worms!" (You have wasted two terms)

    • @georgefrost6840
      @georgefrost6840 Год назад +5

      For wealth and hellness

  • @MrUnidyne
    @MrUnidyne Год назад +9

    I was reading a notice with the words "NO PARTS", and the reflection on a window read "STRAP ON".
    So, "Strap on no parts", or "No parts strap on".

  • @almightyhydra
    @almightyhydra Год назад +4

    There's a Korean song called "rokkugo" (which is the word for "backwards" backwards) where each line is a palindrome. It contains very strange lyrics as you might imagine, such as "dear, I don't see the glasses" and "the watermelon claps".

    • @RoaldvdM
      @RoaldvdM Год назад

      I had to look it up :-) Rokkuko! Rokkuko! Rokkuko! Speak, speak!
      Rokkuko! Rokkuko! Rokkuko! Speak, speak!!
      Ah, there's a lot, a lot, a lot, a lot!!
      All so pretty, pretty, pretty
      Dear, do you see that over there?
      Dear, I can't see the glasses
      A bar's beer keg, give enough rice wine
      It's all telepathy, kiss kiss kiss!
      Ah I like it, I like it! The watermelon claps!
      Let's sing it again!
      Rokkuko! Rokkuko! Rokkuko! Speak, speak!
      Rokkuko! Rokkuko! Rokkuko! Speak, speak!!
      Are you going where you're going? Sunday Swiss~
      Fix it fix it, soft soft soft!
      Ah I like it, I like it! The watermelon claps!
      Let's sing it again!
      Backwards yesterday, backwards today
      Everything is spinning backwards
      Tomorrow has to come!
      Happiness' clock is spinning and ticking!!
      Tick tick tick 1 2 3 4 5 6 GO!
      Rokkuko! Rokkuko! Rokkuko! Speak, speak!
      Rokkuko! Rokkuko! Rokkuko! Speak, speak!!
      Rap)
      ZYXWVUTSRQPONMLKJIHGFEDCBA
      10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 Ping!
      From bottom to top, front back to front,
      Everything is backwards, rokkuko!
      Grandpa, grandma; mister, woman
      People of all ages and gender, tada
      Everything is backwards, rokkuko!!
      Are you coming back after leaving
      Did you leave as you were coming out?
      Sons and daughters have grown, these daughters!
      The stars look the same, looking like stars!
      Let's just keep dreaming!
      Marriage possessions of a gypsy's husbands house
      All becoming soybean paste soup!
      Ah I like it, I like it! The watermelon claps!
      Let's sing it again!
      Backwards yesterday, backwards today
      Everything is spinning backwards
      Tomorrow has to come!
      Happiness' clock is spinning and ticking!!
      Tick tick tick 1 2 3 4 5 6 GO!
      Rokkuko! Rokkuko! Rokkuko! Speak, speak!
      Rokkuko! Rokkuko! Rokkuko! Speak, speak!!
      Ah, I like it, I like it! The watermelon claps! Let's sing it again!
      Rokkuko! Rokkuko! Rokkuko! Speak, speak!
      Rokkuko! Rokkuko! Rokkuko! Speak, speak!!

  • @jonnaborosky8836
    @jonnaborosky8836 Год назад

    Watching and listening to you is so enjoyable!

  • @pook49
    @pook49 3 года назад +60

    I literally finished Tenet yesterday. This actually makes way too much sense in the context of the movie (the movie is about moving backwards and forwards through time at the same time)

    • @RobWords
      @RobWords  3 года назад +25

      I'm going to have to watch it, aren't I?

    • @seancotterman2584
      @seancotterman2584 3 года назад +11

      @@RobWords omg absolutely!!! It's a palindromists dream. Very cool concept.

  • @Aboucek75
    @Aboucek75 Год назад +22

    I discovered my favorite palindrome on a band t-shirt that I had in my teens. "Satan oscillate my metallic sonatas." Of course you need to fiddle with the spaces a bit, but i loved how fitting it was for the use in which I encountered it.

    • @mickeythompson9537
      @mickeythompson9537 Год назад +2

      Yes, my favourite too - heard from Stephen Fry many years ago.

    • @Jock-mj4zd
      @Jock-mj4zd Год назад +3

      Soundgarden was the band, for anyone guessing!

    • @Jock-mj4zd
      @Jock-mj4zd Год назад +2

      I was scrolling for this comment as I’m a fanatical SG fan, but I thought it was far too obscure for there to be any chance!

  • @lindacanfield4453
    @lindacanfield4453 Год назад

    That was the most fun video! Thank you for your research to entertain us with that subject!

  • @judih.8754
    @judih.8754 Год назад

    I love this stuff. Such clever bits of information!

  • @aldomni45
    @aldomni45 Год назад +9

    I am a little surprised that he didn’t mention that when Adam said ‘Madam, I’m Adam that she could reply ‘Eve’ plus the serpent could reply ‘Tut, tut’😊

  • @Passacaglia43
    @Passacaglia43 Год назад +10

    I’m a particular fan of the French, “Ésope reste ici et se repose,” “Æsop remains here and rests.” I like especially how the pivot point in the palindromic word “ici”-“here”-which helps you situate yourself.

  • @deegee424
    @deegee424 Год назад +2

    My favorite palindrome is aibohpiphobia....the fear of palindromes, which is, itself, a palindrome. I think it's hilarious, despite the fact that if you had it, you wouldn't be able to say it, so it's a little 'insult added to injury'. LOL I loved this video. I've been know to stop my car on the side of the road to photograph the odometer in my car when it hits a palindrome. I even caught a palindrome once on the odometer, thermometer, and clock all at the same time! #lifegoals LOL

  • @SPQSpartacus
    @SPQSpartacus Год назад +5

    The Finnish comedy group Alivaltiosihteeri has been making weekly palindromes for decades now. Finnish is a very wordplay-friendly language.

  • @Karlmessner
    @Karlmessner Год назад +14

    If you don’t know, Weird Al Yankivic does a song in the voice of Bob Dylan where he lists ,many long palindromes like “Lisa Bonet ate no basil” he song is called “Bob” of course

    • @Karlmessner
      @Karlmessner Год назад

      ruclips.net/video/JUQDzj6R3p4/видео.html

    • @ericharris76
      @ericharris76 Год назад

      Well, that saves me having to mention it. But I still can provide the link.
      ruclips.net/video/JUQDzj6R3p4/видео.html

  • @NidusFormicarum
    @NidusFormicarum Год назад +34

    My favourite in Swedish - in my mother tongue (I've never been on her tongue) - is "Tre pur nakna demoner ilade på pedal i Reno med ankan Rupert." meaning "Three stark naked demons rushed by pedaling in Reno with the duck Rupert." I like to create my owns. This one for example is my own composition: "Tolkare av öst tar era namn. Aror anmanar er att söva era klot." meaning "Interpreters of the East take your names. Macaws urge you to sedate your globes."

    • @Algabatz
      @Algabatz Год назад +3

      Inte att förglömma: Adolf i Paris rapar sirap i Floda (Svenska Mad)

    • @howler6490
      @howler6490 Год назад +1

      You can sedate my globes anytime...wow!

    • @LupeFenrir
      @LupeFenrir Год назад

      Wow, Ni talar bra latin!

  • @zapre2284
    @zapre2284 Год назад +3

    I used to have a phone number that was a pallindrome .....the fact it was the landline number of a house I lived in as a kid over 30 years ago, proves how memorable it was.

  • @levyleh
    @levyleh Год назад

    Omg I just found your channel an absolutely love these videos!

  • @HoosierRallyMaster
    @HoosierRallyMaster 9 месяцев назад +3

    After over a half century of knowing that "Madam I'm Adam" is a palindrome, it wasn't until your dramatic setting that I realized that the correct response is simply "Eve"

  • @deewesthill1213
    @deewesthill1213 Год назад +16

    A long time ago i thought up a palindrome that I've never seen mentioned in books of written lists. "Evil, a side to news we noted, is alive." (Of course the commas are not palindromic.) I've thought up plenty of others, most of which didn't make much sense. I always try to make palindromes at times such as waiting in line. It helps pass the time.

  • @stevelknievel4183
    @stevelknievel4183 2 года назад +11

    'Madam, I'm Adam' can be extended to 'Madam, in Eden, I'm Adam'.
    Also, in The Simpsons episode 'They Saved Lisa's Brain', the Comic Book Guy comes out with 'Rise to vote, sir' during a meeting of the Springfield chapter of Mensa.

    • @gary.h.turner
      @gary.h.turner Год назад +5

      And, of course, Eve replied with her own palindromic name:
      "Eve."

    • @TradingHappy
      @TradingHappy Год назад +1

      @@gary.h.turner And the snake said Tut, tut! Saw a fun illustration of this decades ago that got me interested in palandromes.

    • @octopus_72
      @octopus_72 Год назад

      "Eve, mad Adam, Eve!"

  • @semperfi818
    @semperfi818 Год назад +1

    As literate as their lyrics could be, I never expected my favorite band to contribute to the world's store of palindromes in English, but an EP that Soundgarden had included in a deluxe release of their 1991 LP, _Badmotorfinger,_ bore this astonishing palindromic title, an apropos gesture toward the metal genres which inspired these musicians: _Satanoscillatemymetallicsonatas_ -- yes, all one word.

  • @JFBassett2050
    @JFBassett2050 Год назад

    Rob: Always good stuff!

  • @jake6112
    @jake6112 3 года назад +33

    I'm rather sad I've already run out of videos from your channel only a day after I discovered you. Great content, Rob! I've always been fascinated by etymology and linguistics and you cover some excellent topics.

    • @andreasboe4509
      @andreasboe4509 Год назад +1

      Watch the channel of Jay Foreman from Map Men

    • @emilian0e
      @emilian0e Год назад

      Cry about it🖕🖕

  • @coenisgreat
    @coenisgreat Год назад +12

    My favourite palindromes are from the They Might Be Giants song 'I Palindrome I', looking up which brought me here.
    The lyrics feature palindromes of different varieties, some more abstract than others, including most of the sets of notes, and making reference to the ouroborus.
    But my favourite is the bridge of the song, which simply goes;
    "Son I am able, oh you scare me, watch, said I, beloved I said watch me scare you, oh said she, able am I, Son."
    Not the most sensical line in the world, but I love how it's played and sounds.

    • @nantsuu
      @nantsuu Год назад

      That bridge is a rare example of the full word palindrome! The letters backwards and forwards are different but the words are the same both ways around.

    • @Ashebrethafe
      @Ashebrethafe Год назад +1

      @@nantsuu I've seen an even longer one: "'America to ship a man to Mars' -- from 'Things of Tomorrow'. Intention, perhaps, but perhaps intention tomorrow of things from Mars to man a ship to America!"

    • @hensleydodson5733
      @hensleydodson5733 8 месяцев назад

      SHE SAID* oh you scare me

  • @ralkadde
    @ralkadde Год назад +1

    Here is an example from German. A pillar (of a building) with a relief is a relief pillar or "Reliefpfeiler". which is the same thing written backwards.

  • @tomadams2319
    @tomadams2319 2 месяца назад

    I just watched this. Hilarious, one of your best ever!

  • @stevetournay6103
    @stevetournay6103 Год назад +18

    One of my favourite Weird Al Yankovic songs is called "BOB". It consists entirely of Al, decked out as Bob Dylan and, er, singing in the same manner, cranking out a couple dozen palindromes which he holds out in front of him on cards. It's hilarious.

    • @OtakuUnitedStudio
      @OtakuUnitedStudio Год назад +1

      He also makes the song rhyme.

    • @jitagan
      @jitagan Год назад +2

      "Go hang a salami. I'm a lasagna hog" is my favorite mentioned in that song.

    • @w.reidripley1968
      @w.reidripley1968 Год назад

      Yet another bit of Weird Al chowhounding. He must have considerable self discipline to stay as trim as he does.

    • @pamr.429
      @pamr.429 Год назад +1

      Yes, I love that song! Every line is a distinct palindrome, even the title! It's one of his style parodies, parodying the style of an artist, rather than a particular song.

    • @stevetournay6103
      @stevetournay6103 4 дня назад +1

      ​​@@pamr.429 Yes. Yankovic is a seriously underrated composer. His "Stop Forwarding That Crap To Me" is the best Jim Steinman song Steinman ever didn't write. (That chameleon composing style of Al's gave me the idea for a musical, but that's another story...)

  • @marialeotta2973
    @marialeotta2973 Год назад +11

    Thanks for this video, it brought me great joy, consider me a new subscriber!
    I once wrote a small collection of palindromic haiku poems for a friend - it was a strange form of self torture but I did also quite enjoy the challenge
    We were always vaguely disappointed that "palindrome" as a word was not, in fact, a palindrome at all...
    My favourite single word palindrome is NOON (because it has rotational symmetry when all in caps AND if you write it in lowercase (font dependent) you potentially have a mirror symmetry too... once you rid the "n" of its stem)

  • @jimbrown5552
    @jimbrown5552 Месяц назад

    Thanks again for sharing

  • @SoItGoesCAL34
    @SoItGoesCAL34 Год назад

    That was fun. Thanks for sharing.

  • @Norgust
    @Norgust Год назад +122

    Fun fact: palindromes are literally in our genes. Many DNA sequences in our genome are palindromes as they make for improved binding with proteins. en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Palindromic_sequence

    • @ultralowspekken
      @ultralowspekken Год назад +5

      Considering how, when explained to children in schools, there are only 2 combinations of characters possible, out of 4 characters in any order, for a total of 4 different combinations, given they might be completely randomized, there are high chances that our DNA's bindings would result in palindromic sequences.
      This is actually you finding a pattern where there isn't any. en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Apophenia
      (Of course take this as a joke. It's interesting what you pointed out :) )

    • @bed3353
      @bed3353 Год назад +2

      @@ultralowspekken I was concerned until I read the end

  • @KathrinePandell
    @KathrinePandell 3 года назад +10

    I'm so happy that I found your channel! I put your videos on for my students as "break time". Might make them find palindromes as a fun excercise on Tuesday.

    • @RobWords
      @RobWords  3 года назад

      Wonderful! Let me know if they come up with anything genius.

  • @PaulDeCamp
    @PaulDeCamp 15 дней назад

    "Gateman nametag" that I wore when I guarded the door is both a palindrome and a semordnilap. Whenever a semordnilap elements make phrasal sense it's a palindrome as well. Beautiful sloops have "sleek keels", and after a regatta I like to enjoy a "regal lager."

  • @_fedmar_
    @_fedmar_ 4 месяца назад +1

    In my opinion, the Sator square is, well, a linguistic joke. A fun little "game" that spread through Europe beacause it was, well, interesting! The translation I was taught is along the lines of "the farmer Arepo holds the wheel laboriously."

  • @mfC0RD
    @mfC0RD 3 года назад +75

    Just out of curiosity, the most famous palindrome sentence in Portuguese is "socorram-me, subi no ônibus em Marrocos", which means "help me, I got on the bus in Morocco".
    Great video, as always!

    • @RobWords
      @RobWords  3 года назад +8

      Love it Marcos! Thanks

    • @arthurhenriqued.a.ribeiro2078
      @arthurhenriqued.a.ribeiro2078 3 года назад +5

      Along with "a torre da derrota" and "anotaram a data da maratona"

    • @PiterKeo
      @PiterKeo Год назад +4

      My favorite Portuguese palindrome is "me vê se a panela da moça é de aço, Madalena Paes, e vem" (check for me whether the girl's cooking pot is of steel, Madalena Paes, and come".

    • @charlytaylor1748
      @charlytaylor1748 Год назад +3

      @@PiterKeo How about in Spanish (which doesn't lend itself to palindromes) "Dábale arroz a la zorra el abád" - the abbot gave rice to the vixen

    • @hankvandenakker4271
      @hankvandenakker4271 Год назад

      I WAS JUST GOING TO WRITE THAT, BUT READ THE COMMENTS FIRST.

  • @samueltaunton7566
    @samueltaunton7566 Год назад +4

    "Reviled did I live, evil I did deliver."
    That's another with the spacing the same backwards!

  • @dextrowim
    @dextrowim Год назад +2

    In Dutch the longest 1 word palindrome is "Koortsmeetsysteemstrook" (litterally Fever Measuring System Strip), those were little strips you could put on somebody forehead and the color would indicate if there is a fever...

    • @HTMLbrowser
      @HTMLbrowser Год назад +1

      The book titled "Opperlandse Taal- En Letterkunde" has a nice list of Dutch palindromes.

  • @nothombium
    @nothombium Год назад

    Great video!!

  • @kellyp2955
    @kellyp2955 3 года назад +5

    This is the best channel i have discovered recently! Thank you for lowering my stress levels while educating me at the same time, i love your content!

    • @RobWords
      @RobWords  3 года назад +1

      Aw, thanks a lot Kelly! Glad you like it.

  • @aidanramage3320
    @aidanramage3320 3 года назад +13

    love your channel bro, you definitely need more subsribers

  • @studio6584
    @studio6584 Год назад

    This is great, thank you Rob. FYI Otto is the Otto cycle which describes the workings of a typical internal combustion engine, named after Nicolaus Otto. Meantime, I once wrote a musical on an elaborate version of the Hare and Tortoise story, and had a character standing in the middle of the stage dressed as a Speed Camera (to catch the Hare speeding, of course), which looked both ways and spoke in palindromes, e.g. "A Toyota's a Toyota" and so on. Great fun to write her lines, and it sparked a while new generation of palindrome nerds - including me.

  • @sakureon
    @sakureon Год назад +1

    The palindrome "A dog! A panic in a pagoda!" lives in my head rent free.

  • @DaeBenesse
    @DaeBenesse 3 года назад +39

    Really enjoy your content! Have you considered doing a video on homonyms, homophones, synonyms, etc.? It would be interesting to explore how one word came to have several meanings and vise-versa.

    • @RobWords
      @RobWords  3 года назад +14

      This is a great idea. I'll add it to the list!

    • @howler6490
      @howler6490 Год назад +2

      Add " aptronyms", they can be hilarious...

    • @afischer8327
      @afischer8327 Год назад +2

      @@howler6490 Just found them, trying not to laugh too loudly. And inaptronyms, the ironic variant. My favourites are Eugenius Outerbridge (aptronym), namesake of the Outerbridge Crossing, the outermost bridge between New York and New Jersey; Jaime Sin (inaptronym), Catholic prelate, later Cardinal Sin, and I.C. Notting, who is, of course, an opthalmologist.

  • @irzaalishah
    @irzaalishah Год назад +4

    My favourite one is “Never odd or even”

  • @randybugger3006
    @randybugger3006 Год назад

    I wish I could give more than one thumbs up. This is so awesome.

  • @GameyRaccoon
    @GameyRaccoon Год назад

    I like this channel! subscribing

  • @beardymanthings
    @beardymanthings Год назад +3

    It's apt that palin meant "back again", everytime Michael Palin returned to somewhere he's travelled before they'd say "Palin's back again". (I'm so sorry for that, so called, joke).
    Stumbled across your channel yesterday, I'm about 20 videos in now. Great channel 👍👍

  • @davidrichardson2856
    @davidrichardson2856 Год назад +5

    My favorite palindrome is the song UFO TOFU by Bela Fleck and the Flecktones. Sounds the same forwards and backwards, it’s incredible.

  • @ayaaldeeb6153
    @ayaaldeeb6153 Год назад

    Wow, you have attractive way of explaining, thanks alot 😩🌹🌹🌹🌹👏👏

  • @verstrahlt1907
    @verstrahlt1907 Год назад

    very interesting; especially
    the: 4-direction & spinning.

  • @markstuckey6225
    @markstuckey6225 Год назад +31

    When I was child a new bridge was built in my town over a tidal creek next to the railway station. The bridges in my country almost always have the year cast into them. I noticed that the year at each end was the same regardless of which way you crossed; the year was 1961.

    • @shoutyman9922
      @shoutyman9922 Год назад +5

      It's also one of the few years that can be read upside down. The previous one was 1881. You will have to wait nearly 4000 years 'till the next one - 6009.

    • @allanrichardson9081
      @allanrichardson9081 Год назад +2

      The Brooklyn bridge was built in 1881.

    • @diegonals
      @diegonals Год назад +1

      @@shoutyman9922 its a strech but 2002 can also work

    • @dams0001
      @dams0001 Год назад +1

      @@diegonals You mean 2005?

    • @diegonals
      @diegonals Год назад

      @@dams0001 5 upside down doesnt look like a 2

  • @spencereades
    @spencereades Год назад +3

    "Madam, I'm Adam" was actually only the second palindrome spoken by Adam. The first was immediately after he saw Eve and exclaimed "Wow!"

  • @JTan74
    @JTan74 Год назад

    The intro alone already deserved a thumbs up. 😁

  • @ThorsteinnK
    @ThorsteinnK Год назад

    Can I just say that you sir are absolutely hilarious!

  • @mik92y
    @mik92y 3 года назад +25

    The word "treibt" in the german palindrome means to "drive" in the sense of pushing. So it means beer makes you want to pee (beer is pushing inside your pants) :D

    • @RobWords
      @RobWords  3 года назад +7

      Brilliant! I was really struggling to translate it properly (as you can tell). Thanks.

    • @DerEchteBold
      @DerEchteBold Год назад

      Well, the word can mean that but this palindrome doesn't really, I would've never thought of that explanation.

    • @joeviolet4185
      @joeviolet4185 Год назад +1

      Well that's exactly what i immediately thought of when the palindrome was written on the screen: "Treiben in connexion with beverages does not mean float, rather drive (the urine out of the bladder) and that's why it all happens in the slip."

  • @saldada8870
    @saldada8870 3 года назад +10

    Your Channel is very interesting, and it always teaches me something new!

  • @leonannaves9273
    @leonannaves9273 Год назад +1

    In portuguese, we have the phrase "Socorram me, subi no ônibus em Marrocos", which means "Help me, I got in a bus in Morocco", it is a palindrome

  • @jeanbonnefoy1377
    @jeanbonnefoy1377 Год назад

    6:51 As soon as I saw the title of this video, I wondered not if but when you'd introduce Georges Perec. It is worth noting that Perec was one of the most distinguished honourable member of the Oulipo ("OUvroir de LIttérature POtentielle" or 'Workshop of Potential Literature') which continually and persistently works on all possible sorts of linguistically (and mathematically challenging endeavours of all forms and shapes. And incidentally, Perec is my favourite French writer.

  • @markb1170
    @markb1170 2 года назад +6

    High-quality content and super interesting topics. Finally the youtube algorithm got it right! Never thought twice about subscribing. Looking forward to your next videos. :)

  • @johnblaiklock702
    @johnblaiklock702 Год назад +7

    "In chemistry a salt is a compound of a metal and a non-metal."
    There you are - a perfectly legitimate use of 'a salt'.

    • @mal2ksc
      @mal2ksc Год назад +2

      And "I rolled a ten" is something fairly commonly heard at the gaming table.

  • @tigristhelynx7224
    @tigristhelynx7224 Год назад

    You cracked me up during the different languages segment, the German one was hilarious. So fun!

  • @feralbluee
    @feralbluee Год назад

    It’s always fun and a pleasure to watch your videos, because you smile. you have a wonderful expression.
    there’s another British fellow who talks about pronunciations, but he’s soo very serious you’d think he was explaining brain surgery. and frankly, he’s depressing and hard to watch.
    thank you for being you! :) 🌹🌱
    Oh! i just love the word “kayak”, which is probably a Tinglet, or Alaskan Native American word. 🚣🏿‍♂️

  • @alecsnider3225
    @alecsnider3225 Год назад +4

    These videos are strangely addictive :) Are we not drawn onward, we few, drawn onward to new era?

  • @vernonbridgewater1172
    @vernonbridgewater1172 Год назад +8

    I once saw a old tombstone that had a palindromic writing on it and it was very interesting because it could be read forward or backwards, horizontally and what was unusual , diagonally I wish I had a copy of it it was very unusual and it probably took the man most of his life to think it up

  • @angreagach
    @angreagach Месяц назад

    Someone may very well have pointed this out already, but the word "desserts," which you mention as the reverse of the word, "stressed," a semordnilap (a word or phrase that forms a different word or phrase when spelled backwards), is used in the palindrome "Desserts I desire not, so long no lost one rise distressed." (I didn't make that up, I'm glad to say.)