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Newest Oldest Alphabetical lacitebahplAEirenic in Erie- Ray N. Franklin, © 13:11 10 Feb 2021
Seeds: sadistic and words ending in “nic” After working on sadistic, I set that aside for over a week. When I went back to my notes, eirenic called out to me. By the way, eirenic is the British spelling. In US English, the word is irenic. Both spellings mean making peace between religious sects or denominations. I plugged eirenic into the composer. It has one split, cin-erie. That makes a simple palindrome by dropping one C. Eirenic in Erie
Rimy sadistic illicit Sid as Ymir- Ray N. Franklin, © 09:46 01 Feb 2021
Seed word: sadistic. I found multiple palindromes from this seed word, but the search took quite some time and spanned several splits of the reversed word, citsidas. Split: c-its-idas I first wrote this with the split on the left and sadistic on the right. C it’s Ida’s sadistic I dropped the possessive S from Ida’s to improve the palindrome. C it’s Ida, sadistic To grow the palindrome, I needed words that ended with C for the left side. I started reviewing the Reversed word list of words that begin with C. That group spans thirteen pages in the Palindromedary. I used the Reversed list because that groups words by their endings. Fewer words end with C than begin with C. A sample from the Reversed list shows how this helps me. Cinerie eirenic The word on the left is the reverse of eirenic, so it begins with C. The word eirenic would go on the left of the palindrome, to replace the lonely C. The reversed word, cinerie, minus the C goes on the right after sadistic. As I was scanning the list, I was looking at the reversed word, ignoring the C, and checking if what remained was a string of words I could use. For the example above, “inerie” becomes the simple phrase “in Erie.” I found a number of words that fit this pattern. After exhausting the Reversed list, I had the short list of palindromes below. Eirenic, it’s Ida, sadistic in Erie. Runic, it’s Ida, sadistic in Ur. Boric, it’s Ida, sadistic I rob. Music, it’s Ida, sadistic I sum. Problematic, it’s Ida, sadistic I tame L. Borp. Kinematic, it’s Ida, sadistic I tame Nik. Hepatic, it’s Ida, sadistic I tap, eh? Antistatic, it’s Ida, sadistic, I tat Sitna. Metic, it’s Ida, sadistic item. Marc, it’s Ida, sadistic ram. I also toyed with a variant and found one that isn’t terrible. Rueta! Mac! It’s Ida, sadistic amateur. Of all these, I like only two. The first one is fun because it uses both eirenic and Erie in a sentence, but eirenic and sadistic have conflicting meanings. A sadistic amateur also has some appeal, but I figured I could do better if I changed splits. Split: cit-sid-as The middle fragment is clearly a name, Sid. With the right fragment, it sounded like a phrase used on movie posters and advertisements: actor so-and-so as some character name. I thought it would be amusing to put sadistic on the left, which becomes an attribute of the actor, not the character in the film. I needed to expand this palindrome in the middle. That would require one or more words that ended with cit, where the rest was symmetrical. The palindromedary lists only eight words that end with cit. In one of them, everything before cit was symmetrical! Sadistic illicit Sid as Perfect! I have a very unflattering description of an actor named Sid, starring as some character. The easiest way to expand this particular pattern is to find an ananym pair. Each pair must include another adjective to use before sadistic, and a word that is or could be a name for the right side. So I went searching through the Ananyms word list. I found a surprising number of matches. Rimy sadistic illicit Sid as Ymir Asset sadistic illicit Sid as Tessa Sore sadistic illicit Sid as Eros Star sadistic illicit Sid as Rats Stressed sadistic illicit Sid as Des Serts Rama's sadistic illicit Sid as Samar Rat sadistic illicit Sid as Tar Raw sadistic illicit Sid as War Regal sadistic illicit Sid as Lager Repaid sadistic illicit Sid as Diaper Deliver sadistic illicit Sid as Revi Led Naive sadistic illicit Sid as Evian Made sadistic illicit Sid as Edam Anal sadistic illicit Sid as Lana Lone sadistic illicit Sid as Enol Able sadistic illicit Sid as Elba Sued sadistic illicit Sid as Deus Trodden sadistic illicit Sid as Ned Dort Rewarded sadistic illicit Sid as D. E. Drawer The first palindrome I composed turned out to the the best: Rimy sadistic illicit Sid as Ymir. I loved this one and imagined a crazy adventure movie centered around Ymir, a Norse god. To expand this theme, I looked up Norse mythology and listed some names I thought might have potential. I found two more palindromes using the same pattern, actor as so-and-so. Here’s the final marketing press release for this palindromic Norse adventure film. Can you find all the palindromes? Shocking new film! Icy Death! Valiant humans battle alongside Norse gods against frozen evil. Will Asgard prevail? Can humanity survive? Cast of sevens. Starring: Rimy sadistic illicit Sid as Ymir Red Labs’ Adder Edd as Balder Doh! Sabrina Nirb as Hod Scintillating dialogue: “Sad Ymir, Ema namer. I Mydas.” “Red Damion ale, Delano?” “I’m Adder.” “Hew-ha, Ymir. I’m Yahweh.” Critiques rave: “Red daffodil slid off Adder.”
Sleep a must as evil, alive satsuma peels!- Kris Rickards @KJBRickards, © 12:20 30 Dec 2020
When I first learned of palindromes at school in the 80s, a lad in the class pointed out his name was one: Lee Peel. I always wanted to base a character in a story on this idea. For example, an assassin known only as “The Palindrome,” but I just couldn’t come up with the right name to suit that was as good as Lee’s. This surreal submission about an evil citrus fruit assassin ultimately came from these ideas that have followed me around for over thirty years.
Rail set is a sites liar- Kris Rickards, © 10:51 29 Dec 2020
This palindrome is inspired by those trainsets you get and ignore as child, but become obsessed with as a retired Grandfather. These old men in their attics and sheds create this idyllic landscapes in the most minutiae detail based upon the sceneries invented by their rose tinted nostalgia. But as Simone Signoret said in 1975, "nostalgia isn't what it used to be," and they are missing the truth of history. Old men hobbyists, And young novelists Create their own little worlds. Based on reality Letting their mind flee A power of God unfurled. But it isn't true Skies aren't always blue Quaint, peaceful and full of bliss These make believe lands Crafted by many hands by men who just need a kiss.
Buns? Ya wrong, Norway! Snub.- Kris Rickards, © 06:24 23 Dec 2020
Now I know to an outsider, this will sound like the most British thing you could read, but it is true. In the UK, we have a celebrity chef called Nigella Lawson. She is the daughter of Lord Nigel Lawson, former Chancellor of the Exchequer, and former wife of billionaire Charles Saatchi. Nigella is exactly how you would imagine a person from the elite section of society to be. She—I do believe unfairly—comes into a lot of flack for her differences to the average working population, with her turn of phrase and her inclusion of the most unheard of and unfindable ingredients. During her cookery shows, she will often regale us with tales of her past and heritage—worlds that are completely alien to the viewers. On one particular show, Nigella told us about her Norwegian heritage, and the divine smells from the village bakery as a prompt for her “boller” recipe—traditional Norwegian buns. The viewer thinks this will actually be something I can make myself. After all, what can be so difficult about buns? Then she pulls the table cloth from beneath. “Make sure to add cardamom, a sneaky little spice coming from Indonesia.” And with that one sentence, your ten-minute-long dream of baking Norwegian buns is taken away.
Na London, Tenet nod Nolan- Kris Rickards, © 12:20 20 Dec 2020
One of the most famous examples of ancient palindrome play, The Sator Square, is something I’ve always been inspired to recreate—except in English rather than Latin. The central word to the Sator Square is tenet. At the time of writing, Tenet was Christopher Nolan’s latest cinematic production in the UK. After restrictions on movement and cinema openings, due to COVID19, were eased in the UK, Tenet was one of very few of the major studios’ films to get a theatrical release. The film even had a “palindromic” time structure. I nod with approval.
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.
Flee, ye gog-eye elf!- J.B. Toner, © 23:06 28 Nov 2020
This one grew naturally out of seeking reversals for elf. I figure an elf who lives underground is likely to develop a bit of a goggle—especially when suddenly assailed by a spectacularly beautiful woman decorated by the entrails of his legionnaires. The Dark Elves worship Lolth, Spider-Goddess of Chaotic Evil, so it’s not out of court for a more or less heroic blade-maid to take issue with them. Personally, I bristle at the almost-but-not-quite palindromable name Lolth: again, that wretched “ht” reversal. This calls for some neologisms; who’s with me? Let the Rise of the Htocracy begin!
Red dame, none madder.- J.B. Toner, © 23:05 28 Nov 2020
The phrase “red dame” was actually the seed of this whole triplet. I was swapping palindromes with a lovely red-haired friend of mine, and paring this line down to four coherent words took over six hours. When it did finally “click,” it was more like an earthshaking ka-chunk.
Drow spot a top sword:- J.B. Toner, © 23:05 28 Nov 2020
Like any well-read, intelligent personage with a loving family, I spend most of my free time wondering what would happen if Red Sonja, the chainmail-bikini-wearing counterpart of Conan the Barbarian, took up arms against the Dark Elves of Menzoberranzan. After nigh-interminable research and rumination, I came to a three-part conclusion: Drow spot a top sword: Red dame, none madder. Flee, ye gog-eye elf! Regarding the first line, the drows, or drow, are the Dark Elves of D&D’s Menzoberranzan. The genesis of this line was, of course, the reversal of drows and sword. I realized immediately that no palindrome can withstand a word like “fight,” cursed with the unmatchable “thg” clump when reversed, so I fell back on reader inference. Elves of any stripe tend to be aloof—in the eyes of impatient mortals, at least—and once I had that word, the word “fool” sprang out at me. Given that, it hopefully goes without explication that the “ah, ha” interjections, coupled with the image of a sword, add up to their foolish aloofness being under direct assault.
Smug spit tips gums- Steve Prosze, © 12:43 09 Oct 2020
I was in the bathroom and spaced out on my mouthwash for healthy "gums", and reversed it into smug. Then I played on the reversal thing on the Palindrome Composer until, I came up with "spits", which is the last step in mouthwash. Having slight dyslexia helps, because I reverse words anyway.
Go home, Delia. Trucker trek curtailed. Emo, hog!- Trucker Poet, © 12:39 14 Aug 2020
Time: half-hour. I started with trucker, naturally, and I used the palindrome composer. I was surprised by the words available for the split rek-curt. I chose trek for the left word, which made a short palindrome right off the bat! Then I played with the words starting with curt. I liked curtailed because it made sense; an organized convoy of truckers on a trek that got canceled. What I had: Delia trucker trek curtailed. Going beyond that was harder. Since the words were all complete, I had to find new ones to expand the sentence. I noticed that "trucker trek curtailed" felt poetic and it could be the middle of a haiku. A haiku palindrome would be cool, so I went with that flow. With Delia on the first line of the haiku, and the trek canceled, it just occurred to me that maybe a trek organizer would start telling the drivers the bad news. "Go home" felt like a good phrase, and to my surprise, it worked just as well in reverse. I'll let you figure out what the last line means. After all, art is in the eye of the beholder. And that was it. Finished. As people used to say where I grew up, "It ain't perfect, but it'll do.”
"One-ton knot, Eno." "One big knot, Tonk." "Gibe?" "No." "One-ton knot, Eno."- Ray N. Franklin, © 19:02 19 Jul 2020
Seed: wonton Time: 15 minutes I was testing some code and entered the classic palindrome, "Wonton, not now!" As so often happens, a couple of random perverse thoughts popped up. One was to add a k between wonton and not: Wonton knot, now! The other told me to replace the homophone won with one. That lead to another short palindrome. One-ton knot, Eno. Then I played around with the natural response a person might have to a one-ton knot: "That's one big knot." The last three words completed the excercise and I had a conversation between a couple of friends admiring an example of post-Gordian conspicuous consumptionism.
Wes knits evil elf fart raffle. Live stinks! Ew!- Ray N. Franklin, © 14:36 11 Jun 2020
Seed: raffle Time: 1 hour I entered raffle in Word Explorer and added an obvious letter t to the elf-far split. By swapping t-raffle for elf-fart, I dropped the extra t to get the valid palindrome, "elf fart raffle." * raffle elf-far * t raffle elf fart * elf fart raffle Then I just looked for ways to expand that silly phrase. Both the verb and ananym lists helped. * Reviled elf fart raffle, deliver! * Detailed elf fart raffle deli at ed * Flower elf fart raffle re wolf * Iron elf fart raffle Nori * Peek at elf fart raffle, Tak. Eep! * Know elf fart raffle, Wonk? * Evil elf fart raffle. Live! * Wes knits evil elf fart raffle. Live stinks! Ew!
Was Ana Nym, my nana saw.- Ray N. Franklin (from Cia, So Manic in a Mosaic), © 11:14 21 May 2020
Seed: ananym Time: 1 minute I chose ananym as my preferred term for a word that makes a different word when reversed. On a whim I reversed ananym and saw "My nana," which caught my attention (even though my family never used the endearment 'nana' for our grandmothers). Then I decided to include an ananym in the palindrome. The finished composition came to me in a flash. Why did I choose ananym from the nineteen terms (anagram, ananym, antigram, drow, half-palindrome, heterodrome, inversion, palinode, recurrent palindrome, retronym, reversagram, reversal, reversal pair, reversible, reversible anagram, reversion, semordnilap, sotadic palindrome, and word reversal, according to The Dictionary of Wordplay by Dave Morice) already in use? It was not random. First, I eliminated the multi-word terms because I wanted a single word. Then I looked at the palindromic potential of each of the remaining terms. I also considered the nature of the term's usage, whether authoritative sources accepted the term, and the word's etymology. Only ananym satisfied all five criteria. Bonus reason: "Ban ananym" is also "banana-nym".
Sir, I demand, I am a maid named Iris.- Leigh Mercer, © 21:38 29 Dec 2019
Eva, can I see bees in a cave?- Anonymous, © 21:30 29 Dec 2019
Barge in! Relate mere war of 1991 for a were metal Ernie grab!- Anonymous, © 21:29 29 Dec 2019
Do good? I? No! Evil anon I deliver. I maim nine more hero men in Saginaw, sanitary sword a tuck, Carol, I... lo!... rack, cut a drowsy rat in Aswan. I gas nine more hero men in Miami. Reviled, I (Nona) live on. I do, O God!- Anonymous, © 21:29 29 Dec 2019
Evil did I dwell; lewd I did live.- Dmitri A. Borgmann, © 21:29 29 Dec 2019
Goldenrod adorned log.- Anonymous, © 21:29 29 Dec 2019
Meet animals; laminate 'em.- Author unknown, © 21:29 29 Dec 2019
Stack cats.- Anonymous, © 21:29 29 Dec 2019
Won't I panic in a pit now?- Jon Agee, © 21:29 29 Dec 2019
Yo, Bob! Mug o' gumbo, boy!- Anonymous, © 21:29 29 Dec 2019
A man, a plan, a canoe, pasta, heros, rajahs, a coloratura, maps, snipe, percale, macaroni, a gag, a banana bag, a tan, a tag, a banana bag again (or a camel), a crepe, pins, Spam, a rut, a Rolo, cash, a jar, sore hats, a peon, a canal: Panama!- Anonymous, © 17:21 29 Dec 2019
Never a foot too far, even.- Leigh Mercer, © 17:21 29 Dec 2019
No word, no bond, row on.- Leigh Mercer, © 17:21 29 Dec 2019
Now Eve, we're here, we've won.- Howard W. Bergerson (aka Edwin Fitzpatrick), © 17:21 29 Dec 2019
Test tube butt set.- Anonymous, © 17:21 29 Dec 2019