Palindromes and palindromedaries around the world, Middle East view
Palindromes and palindromedaries around the world, Middle East view.

Original Palindromes Lacitebahpla

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Newest Oldest Alphabetical lacitebahplA
175 176 177 179 180 181
  • Pull a beetroot to Otto, or tee ball up.
    - Winfred Emmons III @Palindromania, © 22:10 05 Jul 2021
  • Pull a bat up, put a ball up.
    - Anthony Etherin @Anthony_Etherin, © 00:00 14 Apr 2023
  • Pull a bat, I hit a ball up.
    - Leigh Mercer, © 08:44 12 Jun 2021
  • Puke, Vivek-up!
    - Douglas Fink, © 00:00 06 Jan 2025
  • Puke epic: I peek up.
    - Malakidavid (Malaki Stahl), © 22:10 05 Jul 2021
  • Puke, elf, leek up.
    - Douglas Fink, © 22:10 05 Jul 2021
  • Pug, up!
    - krill_irk (David Winter), © 17:45 06 Feb 2022
  • Pug-nosed Amy made song up.
    - Douglas Fink, © 22:10 05 Jul 2021
  • Pug, nip Marc’s cramp—Marc’s cramping up.
    - Martin Clear, © 22:10 05 Jul 2021
  • Pug nine pops a wasp, opening up.
    - Malakidavid (Malaki Stahl), © 00:00 17 Oct 2023
  • Pug get last fare, fill life raft, salt egg up.
    - Malakidavid (Malaki Stahl), © 00:00 23 Oct 2022
  • Pug elates if I set a leg up.
    - Douglas Fink, © 00:00 15 Jan 2024
  • Puff up.
    - Easily created palindrome, discovered by many, © 21:28 28 Dec 2019
  • Puff, irate, tariff up!
    - Douglas Fink, © 22:10 05 Jul 2021
  • Puffins sniff up.
    - Anonymous, © 22:10 05 Jul 2021
  • Puff in, sniff up.
    - Author unknown, © 22:10 05 Jul 2021
  • Puerile note by me, Kate: “take my bet one lire up”.
    - Martin Clear, © 22:10 05 Jul 2021
  • Puerile epidermis: I’m red, I peel, I re-up.
    - Douglas Fink, © 16:54 06 Mar 2022
  • Puerile doyenne, yodel ire up!
    - Malakidavid (Malaki Stahl), © 00:00 22 Nov 2022
  • "P.U.: erase L.A. shoe king, Nike--oh, sales are up!?!"
    - Stephen Chism, © 08:44 12 Jun 2021
  • Pucker up at a pure K cup.
    - Douglas Fink, © 00:00 08 Jul 2024
  • Puce notes set one cup.
    - Douglas Fink, © 22:10 05 Jul 2021
  • Puce nose gages one cup.
    - Douglas Fink, © 22:10 05 Jul 2021
  • Puce kiln utensil is net, unlike cup.
    - Malakidavid (Malaki Stahl), © 22:10 05 Jul 2021
  • Pu, can I strow worts in a cup?
    - Ray N. Franklin, © 16:53 28 Jun 2021
    Pu, can I... pattern
  • Pu, can I snort celeb electrons in a cup?
    - Ray N. Franklin (from Cia, So Manic in a Mosaic), © 13:24 14 Dec 2020
    Time:  15 minutes
    Seed:  electrons
    
    Browsing the Main list, I saw the entry for electrons. The reverse split stood out:  snort-cele. At the very least, I wanted to know how many words ended with snort so I entered electrons into the Word Explorer field in Palindrome Composer. Then I selected the snort-cele split. 
    
    So how many words end in snort? Just one, snort, but that was enough. I wrote "electrons snort cele" in the Current Composition field. Somehow that didn't sound useful, so I reversed the phrase to "snort cele electrons" and saw a possibility. The first word that begins with cele is celeb. I added the b to the end of cele and got "snort celeb electrons." That's a truly surreal phrase. It also solved the doubled-letter in the middle problem. Now the palindrome isn't quite so obviously symmetrical. But I didn't want to stop there.
    
    Playing around, I expanded the phrase to "I snort celeb electrons i." For no particular reason I expanded the right side to the word inactive. Then the left side became evitcani and I added some spaces to make "evit can I snort celeb electrons inactive?"
    
    That sounded unsatisfying, and, the only word ending in evit is the name Levit. Dropping evit, I looked at the remainder and came up with "can I snort celeb electrons in a c," which has a nice grammatical flow. Randomly trying cup for the last word, I decided it was finished. "Pu, can I snort celeb electrons in a cup?"
    
    Pu is a name and also the atomic symbol for Plutonium, a rich source of electrons, both ordinary and celebrity.
  • Pu, can I smell lama mall LEMs in a cup?
    - Ray N. Franklin, © 09:48 28 Jun 2021
    I was browsing the palindromes at mockok.com and found the comments on a palindrome pattern that Timi Imit calls “multiple middles.” One of the more famous patterns is “Eva, can I ... in a cave?” Replace the three dots with any palindromic phrase that fits the grammar of the question. For example, “Eva, can I dump mud in a cave?”
    
    My original palindrome, “Pu, can I snort celeb electrons in a cup?” has a similar pattern. So I decided to work on a few examples of this pattern. Some aim for a longer middle. Others simply use ananym pairs, the two different words that are the reverse of each other. I used the Franklin’s Palindromedary Ananym list to find some pairs that worked. In two cases I added the word “a” in the middle for better grammar. Many more possibilities remain, including creating original multi-middle patterns.
  • Pu, can I sire Eris in a cup?
    - Ray N. Franklin (from Cia, So Manic in a Mosaic), © 16:51 28 Jun 2021
    Pu, can I... pattern
  • Pu, can I reknit Tinker in a cup?
    - Ray N. Franklin, © 16:52 28 Jun 2021
    Pu, can I... pattern
  • Pu, can I rebut a tuber in a cup?
    - Ray N. Franklin (from Cia, So Manic in a Mosaic), © 16:53 28 Jun 2021
    Pu, can I... pattern
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Ray N. Franklin signature, printed in font P22 DaVinci Backwards, mirror script