In linguistics, it's called a palindrome (e.g. race car). However there is no such thing as a "palindromic equation," we might assign that to numbers instead.
A palindrome reads the same both directions.
An equation
They're called palindromes, like the word radar or the name Otto.
Yes, you just need to look at the individual letters in the name. The first three are HAN and the last three are NAH. Therefore, apart from the fact that the name must begin with a capital letter but does not end with one, it reads the same backwards as forwards (i.e. it is a palindrome).
The word river is not a palindrome; spelled in reverse, river is revir. This doesn't work. A palindrome is a word or a sentence that is spelled the same forward or backward, like 'radar'. In sentence form, the word breaks do not have to be in the same places when reversed. Famous examples are: "Able was I ere I saw Elba." "A man, a plan, a canal: Panama." The river Exe in England is a river whose name is a palindrome.
One example of a vegetable name that is the same backwards and forwards is "radar."
Bob. If you reverse it, it still spells the same name.
A word that can be spelled the same way forwards and backwards is called a palindrome.
CIVIC
Anna
palindromes
Tut
Glenelg
palindrome
a word or number which read either forwards or backwards will bo the same a word or number which read either forwards or backwards will be the same race car
OTTO
a palindrome... it's one of the categories for this question