Palindrome
A palindrome (/ˈpæl.ɪn.droʊm/) is a term given to describe a word, a number, a phrase, or other sequence of symbols that read the same backwards as they read forwards. Examples include the words madam or racecar, the date "22/02/2022", or the sentence "A man, a plan, a canal, Panama". The 19-letter Finnish word saippuakivikauppias (a soapstone vendor) is the longest single-word palindrome that is still in everyday use, while the 12-letter term tattarrattat (from James Joyce in Ulysses) is the longest the English language.
The word palindrome was introduced by English poet and writer Henry Peacham in 1638. The concept of a palindrome can be dated to the 3rd-century BC, although no examples survive. The earliest known examples are the 1st-century AD Latin acrostic word square, the Sator Square (which contains both word and sentence palindromes), and the 4th-century Greek Byzantine sentence palindrome nipson anomemata me monan opsin.
Palindromes are also found in music (the table canon and crab canon) and biological structures (most genomes include palindromic gene sequences). In automata theory, the set of all palindromes over an alphabet is a context-free language, but it is not regular.
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