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Salma Hayek Jiménez

salma-hayek.jpgSalma Hayek Jiménez (born September 2, 1966) is a Mexican-Lebanese and American actress, director, television and film producer. Hayek has appeared in more than 30 films and performed as an actress outside of Hollywood in Mexico and Spain. Hayek’s charitable work includes increasing awareness on violence against women and discrimination against immigrants.

Hayek is the first Mexican national to be nominated for a Academy Award for Best Actress. She is one of the most prominent Mexican figures in Hollywood, since the legendary Dolores del Rio. She is also, after Fernanda Montenegro, the second of three Latin American actresses to achieve a Best Actress Oscar nomination.

In July 2007, The Hollywood Reporter ranked Hayek fourth in their inaugural Latino Power 50, a list of the most powerful members of the Hollywood Latino community.That same month, a poll found Hayek to be the “sexiest celebrity” out of a field of 3,000 celebrities (male and female); according to the poll, “65 percent of the U.S. population would use the term ’sexy’ to describe her”.In December 2008, Entertainment Weekly ranked Hayek number 17 in their list of the “25 Smartest People in TV.”

Early life

Hayek was born in Coatzacoalcos, Veracruz, Mexico, the daughter of Diana Jiménez, an opera singer and talent scout, and Sami Hayek, an oil company executive.Hayek’s father is of Lebanese descent while her mother is of Spanish descent. Her first given name, Salma, is Arabic for “peaceful” or “calm”. Raised in a wealthy, devoutly Catholic family, she was sent to the Academy of the Sacred Heart, Grand Coteau, Louisiana, at the age of twelve.While there, she was diagnosed with dyslexia.She was also an accomplished gymnast aspiring to compete in the Olympics, but her father prevented her from being recruited by the Mexican national team.The religious sisters running the Academy ejected Hayek, citing behavioral problems, so she returned to Mexico. She was later sent to live with her aunt in Houston, Texas where she stayed until she was 17 years old. She attended college in Mexico City, where she studied International Relations at the Universidad Iberoamericana. To the surprise of her family, she dropped out to pursue a career as an actress.

Career

Mexico

At the age of 23, Hayek landed the title role in Teresa (1989), a successful Mexican telenovela that made her a star in Mexico. In 1994, Hayek starred in the film El Callejón de los Milagros (Miracle Alley), which has won more awards than any other movie in the history of Mexican cinema. For her performance, Hayek was nominated for an Ariel Award.

Early Hollywood acting work

Bikini-clad Salma Hayek, as Santanico Pandemonium, performs an erotic dance with a snake in this promotional still for From Dusk Till Dawn.

Hayek moved to Los Angeles, California in 1991 to study acting under Stella Adler,hoping for a career in Hollywood, despite limited fluency in English, attributed to her suffering from dyslexia.Robert Rodriguez and his producer wife Elizabeth Avellan soon gave Hayek the break she needed, a starring role opposite Antonio Banderas in 1995’s Desperado.The movie caught Hollywood’s attention, as moviegoers proved to be dazzled by Hayek as Rodriguez had been. Due to Hayek’s loyalty to the director, she would later decline playing the role Catherine Zeta-Jones eventually took in The Mask of Zorro after Rodriguez abandoned the project. She has also appeared in the Spy Kids trilogy.

Hayek had a starring part opposite Matthew Perry in the romantic comedy Fools Rush In. She followed her success in Desperado with a brief but memorable role as a vampire queen in From Dusk Till Dawn, where she provocatively danced on a table. In 1999, she co-starred in Will Smith’s big-budget Wild Wild West, and played a supporting role in Kevin Smith’s Dogma.In 2000, Hayek had an uncredited acting part opposite Benicio del Toro in Traffic. In 2003, she reprised her role from Desperado by appearing in Once Upon a Time in Mexico, the final film of the Mariachi Trilogy.

Later Hollywood work: Director, producer and actress

Around 2000, Hayek founded film production company Ventanarosa, through which she produces film and television projects. Her first feature as a producer was 1999’s El Coronel No Tiene Quien Le Escriba, Mexico’s official selection for submission for Best Foreign Film at the Oscars.

Frida, co-produced by Hayek, was released in 2002. Starring Hayek as Frida Kahlo, and Alfred Molina as her unfaithful husband, Diego Rivera, the film was directed by Julie Taymor and featured an entourage of stars in supporting and minor roles (Valeria Golino, Ashley Judd, Edward Norton, Geoffrey Rush) and cameos (Antonio Banderas). She earned a Best Actress Academy Award nomination for her performance.This made Hayek, along with Katy Jurado and Adriana Barraza, one of only three Mexican actresses to have been nominated for an Academy Award. The film earned two Oscars.

In 2003, Hayek produced and directed the The Maldonado Miracle, a Showtime movie which won her a Daytime Emmy Award for Outstanding Directing in a Children/Youth/Family Special.In December 2005, she directed a music video for Prince, titled “Te Amo Corazon” (”I love you, sweetheart”) that featured her good friend Mia Maestro.

Hayek is an executive producer of Ugly Betty, a television series airing around the world since September 2006. Hayek adapted the series for American television with Ben Silverman, who acquired the rights and scripts from the Colombian telenovela Yo Soy Betty La Fea in 2001. Originally intended as a half hour sitcom for NBC in 2004, the project would later be picked up by ABC for the 2006-2007 season with Silvio Horta also producing. Hayek guest-starred on Ugly Betty as Sofia Reyes, a magazine editor. She also had a cameo playing an actress in the telenovela within the show. The show quickly became a ratings hit and won a Golden Globe Award for Best Comedy Series in 2007. Hayek’s performance as Sofia resulted in a nomination for Outstanding Guest Actress in a Comedy Series at the 59th Primetime Emmy Awards.

In April 2007, Hayek finalized negotiations with MGM to become the CEO of her own Latin themed film production company, Ventanazul.The following month she signed a two year deal with ABC to develop projects for the network through her production company, Ventanarosa.

Hayek is developing and producing La Banda, a Spanish-language romantic comedy set in Mexico, written by Issa Lopez.

Singing credits
Hayek featured on a van in Amsterdam

Hayek has been credited as a song performer in three movies. The first was Desperado for the song Quedate Aquí. In Frida she performed with band Los Vega the Mexican folk song La Bruja. She also recorded Siente mi amor, which played during the end credits of Once Upon a Time in Mexico. She also contributed to Happiness is a Warm Gun in “Across the Universe” as the singing nurses.

Promotional work

Hayek has been a spokesperson for Avon cosmetics since February 2004.She formerly served in the same function for Revlon in 1998. In 2001, she modeled for Chopard and was featured in 2006 Campari adverts as photographed by Mario Testino. On April 3, she helped introduce La Doña, a watch by Cartier inspired by fellow Mexican actress María Félix.

Hayek was also featured in a series of Spanish language commercials for Lincoln cars. Consequently, sales of the Lincoln Navigator among Hispanics increased by twelve percentage points.

In art

In spring 2006, The Blue Star Contemporary Art Center in San Antonio, Texas displayed 16 portrait paintings by muralist George Yepes of Hayek as Aztec goddess Itzapapalotl.

Personal life

Hayek is a naturalized U.S. citizen.She dated actor Edward Norton between 1999 and 2003, and then Josh Lucas in 2003. She has friends in Los Angeles and Mexico and is best friends with Spanish actress Penélope Cruz. The two co-starred in the 2006 film Bandidas. Hayek studied at Ramtha’s School of Enlightenment.Her brother, Sami Hayek,[28] is a designer with his own line of products at Target and clients that include Louis Vuitton, Brad Pitt, and the Mexican Government.

On March 9, 2007, Hayek confirmed she was expecting her first child with PPR CEO Francois-Henri Pinault. On September 21, 2007, she gave birth to daughter Valentina Paloma Pinault at Cedars-Sinai Medical Center in Los Angeles, California.

On July 18, 2008, Hayek and Pinault announced the end of their engagement.

Advocacy

On July 19, 2005, Hayek testified before the U.S. Senate Committee on the Judiciary supporting reauthorizing the Violence Against Women Act.[32] In February 2006, she donated $25,000 to a Coatzacoalcos, Mexico, shelter for battered women and another $50,000 to Monterrey based anti-domestic violence groups.

Since the birth of her daughter, Hayek has worked to help mothers in developing nations worldwide, teaming up with Pampers and UNICEF to help stop the spread of life-threatening maternal and neonatal tetanus. She is a global spokesperson for the Pampers/UNICEF partnership 1 Pack = 1 Vaccine to help raise awareness of the program.

Honors

* Recipient of Glamour magazine Woman of the Year Award in October 2001.
* Recipient of Producers Guild of America Celebration of Diversity Award in 2003.
* Recipient of Harvard Foundation Artist of the Year Award in February 2006.
* Recipient of Time Magazine 25 Most Influential Hispanics in 2005.

 

0 Comments : 12.28.08

100 Best Love Poems

 

Dream Lover

She wakes every morning with a smile
on her face.
She felt his love in her sleep.
Dreamed of his embrace.

Although she’s never met his body.
His heart she does feel.
Anytime she has loved before.
Has never felt so real.

There is no explanation for it.
Not one has she yet found.
But OMG the feeling she gets when
he is around.

Although it may end tomorrow.
The memory will not fade.
For in her heart a life long friend.
She feels that she has made.

She hopes it last forever.
She prays that they do meet.
She dreams of the day her online love.
sweeps her off her feet.

 

0 Comments : 12.20.08

eastbay

AC Transit’s vision for a Bus Rapid Transit system connecting Berkley, Oakland and San Leandro, California.

0 Comments : 12.20.08

sharp dressed man lyrics

David Cook didn’t know 3rd verse of Sharp Dressed Man

0 Comments : 12.20.08

Mercedes-Benz S400 BlueHybrid 2010

mercedes-bluehybrid.jpgMercedes is planning to offer a hybrid S-class starting in 2009. The S400 BlueHybrid, a mild hybrid powered by M-B’s 3.5-liter V-6, boasts a lithium-ion battery co-developed with supplier Continental and described by Daimler R&D boss Thomas Weber as “a crucial breakthrough.”

Unlike Lexus’s LS600hL, the S400 is not aimed at the performance market. Instead, it uses its hybrid drivetrain solely for the traditional aim of fuel efficiency. Mated in the style of a mild hybrid with a 20-hp electric motor and a lithium-ion battery pack, the V-6 will turn off while the car is stationary and kick back on when the driver wants the car to move. Under braking, the batteries are charged. The electric motor can’t propel the S400 on its own but assists in acceleration.

The compact lithium-ion battery module is far more powerful than conventional nickel-metal hydride batteries. It is integrated in the car’s cooling system to ensure optimal operating temperature.

BMW seemed miffed at the announcement, with executives pointing at the joint hybrid-vehicle alliance between BMW and Daimler. But this particular battery is a Mercedes development, and the carmaker holds 25 patents on it.

With internal combustion and electronic wizardry working together to produce 295 horsepower and 277 pound-feet of torque, the S400 is capable of a 0-to-62-mph sprint in a claimed 7.3 seconds and will pull to a governed 155 mph–all while delivering 30 mpg on the European cycle (up from 23 mpg) in S-class comfort. Additionally, the S400 packages all the hybrid equipment under the hood, so neither passenger room nor cargo space suffers for the driver’s conscientiousness.

Europe will get this hybrid in 2009, and a Mercedes spokesman confirmed that it will be offered in the U.S. later–we believe in 2010. If 30 mpg is not enough for you, and you can’t picture yourself in a Prius, start hoping Mercedes offers the upcoming and even thriftier S300 BlueTec diesel hybrid outside Europe.

 

0 Comments : 12.16.08

lee thompson young


Lee is in this interview of backstage of Justice. He talks about the Cyborg looks like! I agree!

0 Comments : 12.13.08

erran baron cohen


Erran Baron Cohen & Y-Love in Berlin studio recording for the upcoming amazing Chanuka album.

0 Comments : 12.13.08

ring of fire lyrics


Johnny Cash - Ring of Fire with lyrics

If I made a mistake and didn’t notify it here in the description, feel free to send me a message, do not comment telling me. Please be aware that I will not make a new video but I will mention the mistake made in the video description.

0 Comments : 12.13.08

palindrome

A palindrome is a word, phrase, number or other sequence of units that can be read the same way in either direction (the adjustment of punctuation and spaces between words is generally permitted). Composing literature in palindromes is an example of constrained writing. The word “palindrome” was coined from Greek roots palin (πάλιν; “back”) and dromos (δρóμος; “way, direction”) by English writer Ben Jonson in the 1600s. The actual Greek phrase to describe the phenomenon is karkinikê epigrafê (καρκινική επιγραφή; crab inscription), or simply karkiniêoi (καρκινιήοι; crabs), alluding to the backward movement of crabs, like an inscription which can be read backwards.

History
The Sator Square

Palindromes date back at least to 79 A.D., as the palindromic Latin word square “Sator Arepo Tenet Opera Rotas” was found as a graffito at Herculaneum, buried by ash in that year. This palindrome is remarkable for the fact that it also reproduces itself if one forms a word from the first letters, then the second letters and so forth. Hence it can be arranged into a word square that reads in four different ways: horizontally or vertically from top left to bottom right orpoertically from bottom right to top left. While some sources translate this as “The sower Arepo holds the wheels at work”, translation is problematic as the word arepo is otherwise unknown; the square may have been a coded Christian signifier,[citation needed] with TENET forming a cross.

A palindrome with the same property is the Hebrew palindrome “We explained the glutton who is in the honey was burned and incinerated” (פרשנו רעבתן שבדבש נתבער ונשרף; PRShW R`BTN ShBDBSh NTB`R WNShRP or parasnu ra`avtan sheba’dvash nitba’er venisraf) by Ibn Ezra, referring to the halachic question as to whether a fly landing in honey makes the honey treif.

Another Latin palindrome, In girum imus nocte et consumimur igni (”We go wandering at night and are consumed by fire” - In girum ire is translated as “go wandering” instead of the literal “go in a circle”, cf. Italian andare in giro, “go strolling or wandering around”), was said to describe the behavior of moths. It is likely from medieval rather than ancient times.

Byzantine Greeks often inscribed the palindrome “Wash the sins, not face alone” (Medieval Greek: ΝΙΨΟΝΑΝΟΜΗΜΑΤΑΜΗΜΟΝΑΝΟΨΙΝ; Modern: Νίψον ανομήματα μη μόναν όψιν; Nipson anomēmata mē monan opsin, note ps is the single Greek letter psi (Ψ)) on baptismal fonts. This is round the font at St. Mary’s Church, Nottingham and also the font in the basilica of St. Sophia, Constantinople, the font of St. Stephen d’Egres, Paris; at St. Menin’s Abbey, Orléans; at Dulwich College; and at the following churches: Worlingsworth (Suffolk), Harlow (Essex), Knapton (Norfolk), St Martin, Ludgate (London), and Hadleigh (Suffolk).

Palindromes in Ancient Sanskrit

Palindromes of considerable complexity were experimented with in Sanskrit poetry. An example which has been called “the most complex and exquisite type of palindrome ever invented”, appears in the 19th canto of the 8th century epic poem śiśupāla-vadha by Magha. It yields the same text if read forwards, backwards, down, or up:

sa-kA-ra-nA-nA-ra-kA-sa-
kA-ya-sA-da-da-sA-ya-kA
ra-sA-ha-vA vA-ha-sA-ra-
nA-da-vA-da-da-vA-da-nA.
(nA da vA da da vA da nA
ra sA ha vA vA ha sA ra
kA ya sA da da sA ya kA
sa kA ra nA nA ra kA sa)

(note: hyphen indicates continuation of same word). The last four lines are an inversion of the first four and are not part of the verse. They are only included here so that its properties can be more easily discerned, as the up-and-down reading depends on re-reading the text back up again in each column.

The stanza translates as:

which relished battle (rasAhavA) contained allies who brought low the bodes and gaits of their various striving enemies (sakAranAnArakAsakAyasAdadasAyakA), and in it the cries of the best of mounts contended with musical instruments (vAhasAranAdavAdadavAdanA).

Types

Characters

The most familiar palindromes, in English at least, are character-by-character: the written characters read the same backwards as forwards. Palindromes may consist of a single word (civic, level, racecar, rotator, Malayalam), or a phrase or sentence (”Was it a rat I saw?”, “Wasilla: All I saw”, “Mr. Owl ate my metal worm”, “Sit on a potato pan, Otis”, “Neil, a trap! Sid is part alien!”, “Go hang a salami I’m a lasagna hog.”, “Satan, oscillate my metallic sonatas”, “I roamed under it as a tired nude Maori”). Punctuation, case and spacing are usually ignored, although some (such as “Rats live on no evil star”) include the spacing.

Three famous English palindromes are “Able was I ere I saw Elba”(which is also palindromic with respect to spacing), “A man, a plan, a canal-Panama!”,[4] and “Madam, in Eden I’m Adam,”.The last example is still palindromic if “in Eden” is left out, as is often the case.

Aibohphobia is a jocular palindromic word meaning fear of palindromes.

Some individuals have names that are palindromes. Some changed their name in order to be a palindrome (one example is actor Robert Trebor), while others were given a palindromic name at birth (such as Neo-Nazi philologist Revilo Oliver, more than one man named Mike Kim, and Anne Enna.

Words

Some palindromes use words as units rather than letters. Examples are “Fall leaves after leaves fall”, “First Ladies rule the State and state the rule: ladies first” and “Girl, bathing on Bikini, eyeing boy, sees boy eyeing bikini on bathing girl”. The command “Level, madam, level!”, composed only of words that are themselves palindromes, is both a character-by-character and a word-by word palindrome.

Lines

Still other palindromes take the line as the unit. The poem Doppelganger, composed by James A. Lindon, is an example.

The dialogue “Crab Canon” in Douglas Hofstadter’s Gödel, Escher, Bach is nearly a line-by-line palindrome. The second half of the dialog consists, with some very minor changes, of the same lines as the first half, but in reverse order and spoken by the opposite characters (i.e., lines spoken by Achilles in the first half are spoken by the Tortoise in the second, and vice versa). In the middle is a non-symmetrical line spoken by the Crab, who enters and spouts some nonsense, apparently triggering the reversal. The structure is modeled after the musical form known as crab canon, in particular the canon a 2 cancrizans of Johann Sebastian Bach’s The Musical Offering.

Molecular Biology

Restriction enzymes recognize a specific sequence of nucleotides and produce a double-stranded cut in the DNA. While recognition sequences vary widely, with lengths between 4 and 8 nucleotides, many of them are palindromic, which correspond to nitrogenous base sequences that read the same backwards and forwards.

Numbers

A palindromic number is a number whose digits, with decimal representation usually assumed, are the same read backwards, for example, 58285. They are studied in recreational mathematics where palindromic numbers with special properties are sought. A palindromic prime is a palindromic number that is a prime number.

Dates

Palindromic dates are of interest to recreational mathematicians and numerologists, and sometimes generate comment in the general media.[8] Whether or not a date is palindromic depends on the style in which it is written. For example, in the dd/mm/yyyy style, the 20th February 2002 (20-02-2002) was palindromic.

Music

Joseph Haydn’s Symphony No.47 in G is nicknamed the Palindrome. The third movement, minuet and trio is a musical palindrome. This clever piece goes forward twice and backwards twice and arrives back at the same place.

The interlude from Alban Berg’s opera Lulu is a palindrome, as are sections and pieces, in arch form, by many other composers, including James Tenney, and most famously Béla Bartók. George Crumb also used musical palindrome to text paint the Federico Garcia Lorca poem “¿Porque nací?”, the first movement of three in his fourth book of Madrigals. Igor Stravinsky’s final composition, The Owl and the Pussy Cat, is a palindrome. British composer Robert Simpson also composed music in the palindrome or based on palindromic themes; the slow movement of his Symphony No. 2 is a palindrome, as is the slow movement of his String Quartet No. 1.

The music of Anton Webern is often imbued with palindromes. Webern, who had studied the music of the Renaissance composer Heinrich Issac, was extremely interested in symmetries in music, be they horizontal or vertical. For one of the most famous examples of horizontal or linear symmetry in Webern’s music, one should look no further than the first phrase in the second movement of the Opus 21 Symphony. In one of the most striking examples of vertical symmetry, the second movement of the Opus 27 Piano Variations, Webern arranges every pitch of this dodecaphonic work around the central pitch axis of A4. From this, each downward reaching interval is replicated exactly in the opposite direction. For example, a G-sharp3 - 13 half-steps down from A4 - is replicated as a B-flat5 - 13 half-steps above.

In classical music, a crab canon is a canon in which one line of the melody is reversed in time and pitch from the other.

Hüsker Dü’s concept album Zen Arcade contains the songs “Reoccurring Dreams” and “Dreams Reoccurring,” the latter of which appears earlier on the album but is actually the intro of the former song played in reverse. Similarly, The Stone Roses’ first album contains the songs “Waterfall” and “Don’t Stop,” the latter of which is essentially the former performed backwards.

The title track of the 1992 album entitled UFO Tofu by Béla Fleck and the Flecktones is said by its composer to be a musical palindrome.

In 2003 the city of San Diego, California commissioned sculptor Roman DeSalvo and composer Joseph Waters to create a public artwork in the form of a safety railing on the 25th Street overpass at F and 25th Streets. The result,Crab Carillon, is a set of 488 tuned chimes that can be played by pedestrians as they cross the overpass. Each chime is tuned to the note of a melody, composed by Waters. The melody is in the form of a palindrome, to accommodate walking in either direction.City of San Diego Public Art website.

The song “I Palindrome I”, by They Might Be Giants, features palindromic lyrics and imagery. The 27-word bridge is word-symmetrical.

“Weird Al” Yankovic’s song “Bob”, from his 2003 album Poodle Hat, consists of rhyming palindromes and parodies the Bob Dylan song Subterranean Homesick Blues.

The 2007 re-release of Yoko Ono’s song “No, No, No” is credited simply to “Ono”, making the artist-title combination a palindrome.

Baby Gramps is known for songs where the lyrics are comprised of palindromes.

The Fall of Troy made a song with the famous palindrome “A Man, A Plan, A Canal, Panama” as title.

The first and last tracks on Andrew Bird’s upcoming album Noble Beast form a palindrome (”Oh No” and “On Ho!”). He has also mentioned palindromes in earlier music, giving his songs names like “11:11″ “T’N'T” and “Fake Palindromes” (although the last title is not a palindrome itself).

Acoustic

A palindrome in which a recorded phrase of speech sounds the same when it is played backwards was discovered by composer John Oswald in 1974 while he was working on audio tape versions of the cut-up technique using recorded readings by William S. Burroughs. Oswald discovered in repeated instances of Burroughs speaking the phrase “I got” that the recordings still sound like “I got” when played backwards.

Long palindromes

Single words

The longest palindromic word in the Oxford English Dictionary is the onomatopoeic tattarrattat, coined by James Joyce in Ulysses (1922) for a knock on the door. The Guinness Book of Records gives detartrated, the past tense of detartrate, a somewhat contrived chemical term meaning to remove tartrates. Rotavator, a trademarked name for an agricultural machine, is often listed in dictionaries. The term redivider (i.e. someone or something that redivides) is used by some writers but appears to be an invented term - only redivide and redivision appear in the Shorter Oxford Dictionary. Malayalam, an Indian language, is of equal length (strictly, this name should be spelt either Malayaalam or Malayālam, as the next to last vowel is long). Another aspect of the word “malayalam” is that it stays a letter palindrome if it is written in any phonetic script like devanagari.

The Finnish word saippuakivikauppias (soap-stone vendor) is claimed to be the world’s longest palindromic word in everyday use. A meaningful derivative from it is saippuakalasalakauppias (soapfish bootlegger). An even longer effort is saippuakuppinippukauppias (soapdish batch seller). Koortsmeetsysteemstrook (fever measuring system strip) is probably the longest palindrome in Dutch, and Kuulilennuteetunneliluuk (bullet flightway tunnel hatch) is the longest palindrome in Estonian.

Palindromic texts

To celebrate the palindromic moment 20:02 02/20 2002, Peter Norvig wrote on that day (20 February 2002) a computer program which produced what may be the world’s longest palindromic “sentence”, running to 17,259 words.The palindrome is an extension of Leigh Mercer’s famous palindrome “A man, a plan, a canal-Panama!”,and is effectively just a random list of comma-separated nouns and acronyms, many of which are obscure. Norvig later surpassed his own record with a 17,826-word palindrome created 11 November 2007.Norvig also mentions that Gerald M. Berns made a palindromic list of 31,358 words with 119,180 letters, not in the form of a sentence.[14] The palindrome was made in October 2007 with Berns’ own rules which limit reuse of words and do not allow proper nouns.

A palindrome of over 5000 words entitled A Gassy Obese Boy’s Saga, composed by Will Thomas, forms a narrative that makes some, albeit rambling, sense.

In 1991, Gordon Dow composed a 306 word palindrome entitled Dog Sees Ada.

The poet Graywyvern wrote a 427-line palindromic poem, The Angel of Death, in 2005.

Two “palindromic novels” appeared, in limited editions, during the 1980s: Dr Awkward & Olson in Oslo by Lawrence Levine and Satire: Veritas by David Stephens.

Demetri Martin, a stand-up comedian, wrote a poem titled “Dammit I’m Mad”, the palindromic title written in 1912 (Words at Play: Quips, Quirks & Oddities, 1997) which is a 223 word palindrome. The poem does not use any made-up words and is grammatically correct.

The “Grand Palindrome” (1969) by novelist Georges Perec is the longest palindrome published in French, with 5,566 letters.

The “Joke into an area” (2007) by Tadeusz Morawski is the longest palindrome published in Polish. It contains over 33,000 letters. The same author wrote the longest palindromic versed poem (2007)containing 4400 letters.

The longest known palindrome in Hebrew, a meaningful palindromic story, was composed by Ghil’ad Zuckermann.

Biological structures

In most genomes or sets of genetic instructions, palindromic motifs are found. However, the meaning of palindrome in the context of genetics is slightly different from the definition used for words and sentences. Since the DNA is formed by two paired strands of nucleotides, and the nucleotides always pair in the same way (Adenine (A) with Thymine (T), Cytosine (C) with Guanine (G)), a (single-stranded) sequence of DNA is said to be a palindrome if it is equal to its complementary sequence read backwards. For example, the sequence ACCTAGGT is palindromic because its complement is TGGATCCA, which is equal to the original sequence in reverse.

A palindromic DNA sequence can form a hairpin. Palindromic motifs are made by the order of the nucleotides that specify the complex chemicals (proteins) which, as a result of those genetic instructions, the cell is to produce. They have been specially researched in bacterial chromosomes and in the so-called Bacterial Interspersed Mosaic Elements (BIMEs) scattered over them. Recently a research genome sequencing project discovered that many of the bases on the Y chromosome are arranged as palindromes. A palindrome structure allows the Y chromosome to repair itself by bending over at the middle if one side is damaged.

It is believed that palindromes are also found frequently in proteins,but their role in the protein function is not clearly known. It is recently suggested that the prevalence existence of palindromes in peptides might be related to the prevalence of low-complexity regions in proteins, as there is a large chance to observe a palindrome in low-complexity sequences. Their prevalence might be also related to an alpha helical formation propensity of these sequences.

Computation theory

In the automata theory, a set of all palindromes in a given alphabet is a typical example of a language which is context-free, but not regular. This means that it is theoretically impossible for a computer with a finite amount of memory to reliably test for palindromes. (For practical purposes with modern computers, this limitation would only apply to incredibly long letter-sequences.)

Additionally, the set of palindromes cannot be reliably tested by a deterministic pushdown automaton and is not LR(k) parseable. When reading a palindrome from left-to-right, it is essentially impossible to locate the “middle” until the entire word has been read.

Semordnilaps

Semordnilap is a name coined for a word or phrase that spells a different word or phrase backwards. “Semordnilap” is itself “palindromes” spelled backwards. According to author O.V. Michaelsen, it was probably coined by logologist Dmitri A. Borgmann and appeared in Oddities and Curiosities, annotated by Martin Gardner, 1961. Semordnilaps are also known as volvograms, heteropalindromes, semi-palindromes, half-palindromes, reversgrams, mynoretehs, reversible anagrams, word reversals, or anadromes.They have also sometimes been called antigrams,though this term now usually refers to anagrams with opposing meanings.

These words are very useful in constructing palindromes; together, each pair forms a palindrome, and they can be added on either side of a shorter palindrome in order to extend it.

The longest single-word instance in English is probably stratagem / mega tarts, which consists of nine letters. There are many examples containing eight letters, to include:

* stressed / desserts
* samaroid (resembling a samara) / dioramas
* rewarder / redrawer
* departer / retraped (construction based on the fact that verb trape is recorded as an alternative spelling of traipse)
* reporter / retroper (construction based on the fact that trope is recorded as a verb, meaning “to furnish with tropes”)

Other examples include:

* gateman / nametag
* deliver / reviled
* lamina / animal
* dennis / sinned
* straw / warts
* star / rats
* stop / pots
* snap / pans
* pins / snip
* lived / devil
* diaper / repaid
* smart / trams
* spit / tips
* live / evil
* dog / god
* gut / tug
* maps / spam
* war / raw
* was / saw
* redrum / “murder”

Non-English palindromes

Palindromes in languages that use an alphabetic writing system work in essentially the same way as English palindromes. In languages that use a writing system other than an alphabet (such as Chinese), a palindrome is still a sequence of characters from that writing system that remains the same when reversed, though the characters now represent words rather than letters.

The treatment of diacritics varies. In languages such as Czech and Spanish, letters with diacritics or accents (except tildes) are not given a separate place in the alphabet, and thus preserve the palindrome whether or not the repeated letter has an ornamentation. However, in Swedish and other Nordic languages, A and A with a ring (å) are distinct letters and must be mirrored exactly to be considered a true palindrome.

A few examples

* Dammit, I’m mad!
* If I had a hi-fi
* Madam, I’m Adam
* Madam, in Eden, I’m Adam
* War, sir, is raw
* Yo, banana boy!
* Do geese see God?
* Rise to vote, sir
* Was it a cat I saw?
* Was it a car or a cat I saw?
* Never odd or even
* No devil lived on
* A Toyota’s a Toyota
* No lemons, no melon
* Now I see bees, I won
* Race fast, safe car
* Ah, Satan sees Natasha
* A dog, a panic in a pagoda
* Ma is as selfless as I am
* Nurse, I spy gypsies-run!
* A man, a plan, a canal: Panama
* A dog, a plan, a canal, pagoda
* Was it Eliot’s toilet I saw?
* No, sir, away! A papaya war is on!
* Go hang a salami, I’m a lasagna hog
* I, madam, I made radio! So I dared! Am I mad? Am I?

 

0 Comments : 12.13.08

palindrome

Dir. Philippe Barcinski / Brazil / 2001
In a single day a man loses everything, and we watch it all backwards. Time’s arrow bent back the wrong way. This is compulsive viewing. Gained critics choice at Gramado Brazil, winner most innovative live action film at Aspen film festival.

0 Comments : 12.13.08

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