no, river is not a palindrome.
Def.: (quoted from wikipedia):
"A palindrome is a word, phrase, number or other sequence of units that can be read the same way in either direction "
as 'river" is backwards 'revir' , its no palindrome.
an example for a palindrome would be: "No devil lived on"
or the lovely German word "reliefpfeiler" .)
Yes, the word river is a noun, a singular, common, concrerte noun; a word for a body of water. The word river is a proper noun when it is the name of a specific river, for example, the Amazon River or the River Thames.
No, the word river is not a palindrome. A palindrome is a word that reads the same forwards and backwards, like "radar" or "level".
No, the word "river" spelled backward is "revir," which is not the same as the original word spelled forward. Therefore, "river" is not a palindrome.
No, the word "river" is not a palindrome because it does not read the same forwards and backwards.
They waded through the river to get to their school. This is an example of word using wade.
Rio is the Spanish word for river. So when a river is named "Rio Coco," for example, the English translation would be "Coco River."
The word river is a common noun; that means that it is a word for any river, any river at all.A common noun becomes a proper noun when it is the name of a person, place, thing, or a title; for example:'The River of No Return' (1954), Marilyn Monroe and Robert MitchumMississippi River, Amazon River, Nile River, Yangtze River, etc.White River Junction, VermontThe River Cafe in New York City, London, Puerto Vallarta, or Calgary
an example of a river mouth would be the mouth of the Mississippi river
Algae is an example of a decomposer in a river.
There is no root word of river. It itself is a root word.
The beaver pulled a log over to the river.
Rejuvenated river is a river with a gradient that is raised by tectonic uplift. An example being the Nile River.