And Dan Hoey, the late and missed member of math-fun, gained some fame from his 540-word palindrome that generalized "A man, a plan, a canal — Panama": <http://www.fun-with-words.com/palin_panama.html <http://www.fun-with-words.com/palin_panama.html>>. —Dan
On Saturday/21November/2020, at 8:08 PM, Stuart Anderson <stuart.errol.anderson@gmail.com> wrote:
That makes me wonder if there are long palindromic words in other languages.
If we allow words in a sentence to form palindromes, we get some long ones;
Oozy rat in a sanitary zoo. Murder for a jar of red rum. Mr. Owl Ate My Metal Worm Napoleon Bonaparte: Able was I ere I saw Elba Are we not pure? “No, sir!” Panama’s moody Noriega brags. “It is garbage!” Irony dooms a man—a prisoner up to new era.