Palʹindrome (3 syl.).

A word or line which reads backwards and forwards alike, as Madam, also Roma tibi subito motibus ibit amor. (Greek, palin dromo, to run back again.) (See Sotadic.)

⁂ The following Greek palindrome is very celebrated:—

NIΨONANOMHMATAMHMONANOΨIN

(Wash my transgressions, not only my face). The legend round the font at St. Mary’s, Nottingham. Also on the font in the basilica of St. Sophia, Constantinople; also on the font of St. Stephen dʹEgres, Paris; at St. Menin’s Abbey, Orléans; at Dulwich College; and at the following churches: Worlingsworth (Suffolk), Harlow (Essex), Knapton (Norfolk), Melton Mowbray (it has been removed to a neighbouring hamlet), St. Martin’s Ludgate (London), and Hadleigh (Suffolk). (See Ingram: Churches of London. vol. ii.; Malcolm: Londinum Redivivum, vol. iv. p. 356; Allen: London, vol. iii. p. 530.)


⁂ It is said that when Napoleon was asked whether he could have invaded England, he answered “Able was I ere I saw Elba.”

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Entry taken from Dictionary of Phrase and Fable, edited by the Rev. E. Cobham Brewer, LL.D. and revised in 1895.

Pale
Pale Faces
Palemon
Palermo Razors
Palēs
Palestine Soup
Palestra
Palestrina or Pelestrina
Paletot [pal-e-to]
Palimpsest
Palindrome
Palinode
Palinurus (in English, Palinure)
Palissy Ware
Pall
Pall-bearers
Pall Mall
Pallace
Palladium
Pallas
Pallet

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Sotadios or Sotadic Verse