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08-03-1999, 09:54 PM
What is the world's longest palindrome?

08-03-1999, 10:15 PM
I don't know what the longest palindromic sentence is.

According to the Guinness Book of World Records, the longest palindromic word is saippuakivikauppias[]/i]. It's a Finnish word for a seller of lye. The longest English word is [i]redivider. In American English releveler is the same length, however in England it's spelled releveller.

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Carpe hoc!

08-03-1999, 10:21 PM
There are a lot of very long palindromes, but most of them don't make much sense. The longest palindrome I've ever seen that actually made some sense was this one (rather clever, I thought, but I have no idea who wrote it):

"T. Eliot, top bard, notes putrid tang emanating, is sad. I'd assign it a name: gnat-dirt upset on drab pot toilet."

08-03-1999, 10:33 PM
After a little web-surfing I found this 540 word variation on "A man, a plan, a canal: Panama"

A man, a plan, a caret, a ban, a myriad, a sum, a lac, a liar,
a hoop, a pint, a catalpa, a gas, an oil, a bird, a yell, a vat,
a caw, a pax, a wag, a tax, a nay, a ram, a cap, a yam, a gay,
a tsar, a wall, a car, a luger, a ward, a bin, a woman, a vassal,
a wolf, a tuna, a nit, a pall, a fret, a watt, a bay, a daub,
a tan, a cab, a datum, a gall, a hat, a fag, a zap, a say, a jaw,
a lay, a wet, a gallop, a tug, a trot, a trap, a tram, a torr,
a caper, a top, a tonk, a toll, a ball, a fair, a sax, a minim,
a tenor, a bass, a passer, a capital, a rut, an amen, a ted,
a cabal, a tang, a sun, an ass, a maw, a sag, a jam, a dam, a sub,
a salt, an axon, a sail, an ad, a wadi, a radian, a room, a rood,
a rip, a tad, a pariah, a revel, a reel, a reed, a pool, a plug,
a pin, a peek, a parabola, a dog, a pat, a cud, a nu, a fan, a pal,
a rum, a nod, an eta, a lag, an eel, a batik, a mug, a mot, a nap,
a maxim, a mood, a leek, a grub, a gob, a gel, a drab, a citadel,
a total, a cedar, a tap, a gag, a rat, a manor, a bar, a gal,
a cola, a pap, a yaw, a tab, a raj, a gab, a nag, a pagan, a bag,
a jar, a bat, a way, a papa, a local, a gar, a baron, a mat, a rag,
a gap, a tar, a decal, a tot, a led, a tic, a bard, a leg, a bog,
a burg, a keel, a doom, a mix, a map, an atom, a gum, a kit,
a baleen, a gala, a ten, a don, a mural, a pan, a faun, a ducat,
a pagoda, a lob, a rap, a keep, a nip, a gulp, a loop, a deer,
a leer, a lever, a hair, a pad, a tapir, a door, a moor, an aid,
a raid, a wad, an alias, an ox, an atlas, a bus, a madam, a jag,
a saw, a mass, an anus, a gnat, a lab, a cadet, an em, a natural,
a tip, a caress, a pass, a baronet, a minimax, a sari, a fall,
a ballot, a knot, a pot, a rep, a carrot, a mart, a part, a tort,
a gut, a poll, a gateway, a law, a jay, a sap, a zag, a fat,
a hall, a gamut, a dab, a can, a tabu, a day, a batt, a waterfall,
a patina, a nut, a flow, a lass, a van, a mow, a nib, a draw,
a regular, a call, a war, a stay, a gam, a yap, a cam, a ray,
an ax, a tag, a wax, a paw, a cat, a valley, a drib, a lion,
a saga, a plat, a catnip, a pooh, a rail, a calamus, a dairyman,
a bater, a canal--Panama.




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Carpe hoc!

08-03-1999, 10:51 PM
you win, the palindrome I was thinking of is;
'go hang a salami i'm a lasagna hog'

go wings!

08-03-1999, 10:57 PM
In the "Giving credit where credit is due" category: The 540 word Panama palindrome above was written by Dan Hoey with the help of a Unix computer program.

His site is:
gopher://wiretap.spies.com/00/Library/Article/Language/palindro.txt (http://gopher://wiretap.spies.com/00/Library/Article/Language/palindro.txt)

08-03-1999, 10:59 PM
Sorry, to get the above link to work, you will have to delete the "http://" off the front of it after you click on it.

08-04-1999, 04:44 PM
There was a palindrome thread a couple of months back in the MPSIMMS forum that I put this in, but nobody knew the rest of it.

A friend who've I've fallen out of touch with used to know a very long palindrome (composed without the aid of a computer) that began and ended with:

"Do good, I? No! Evil I deliver...reviled, I live on. I do, O God!"

Where the elipses are in the above, there were about 5 or 6 long sentences that made absolute sense - I just don't remember them.

Don't know how many total words there were in the thing, but it was damned impressive.

08-04-1999, 05:19 PM
Well, I always thought a true palindrome was supposed to make sense -- thus the beauty of "A man, a plan, a canal -- Panana!" It seems to me to be far easier to run together palindromic phrases that don't make sense.

08-04-1999, 07:04 PM
panana?

08-04-1999, 07:41 PM
The palindrome of Bolton would be notloB.

08-04-1999, 09:41 PM
OK, folks, time to give credit where credit is due. According to a creative writing website for which I've unfortunately lost the URL:

In 1980, David Stephens wrote a 58,000 letter palindrome "Satire: Veritas." Lawrence Levine wrote a palindromic novel of 31,957 words, Dr. Awkward and Olson in Oslo in 1986.

There you have it.

08-04-1999, 09:43 PM
Insert commas after "palindrome" and "Oslo."