Palindromic numerical sequences are series of numbers that read the same when read either forward or backward, such as:
6
121
474
12321
22522
459878954
prose that when read starts and ends with the same letters throughout. example; able was i ere i saw elba. a reference to napolean.
1661 is a palindromic number.
'palindromic' means 'reads the same forward and backward', such as 'mom' and 'noon'. So yes, 878 a palindromic number.
89 does not have any other number - palindromic or otherwise.
As 20569.8 is not palindromic, any number that is like it must contain that property and similarly be non-palindromic, so no.
There are AT rich repeats in palindromic sequences that form a cruciform structure of DNA
Acctaggt gatc agct ggatcc aagctt ggcc agcttgagact
A numerical sequence is a set of ordered numbers. That is all! For example, stochastic sequences are random.
The word form e.g. (Anna or radar) are known as palindromes (singular = palindrome) or palindromic words. The same name is used for numbers that are the same in reverse but are often referred to as 'numerical palindromes' or 'numerically palindromic values'. The use of the word 'numerical' or 'numerically' in relation to a numerical palindrome is not really necessary as being palindromicity, or the nature of being palindromic does not expressly refer to word forms.
prose that when read starts and ends with the same letters throughout. example; able was i ere i saw elba. a reference to napolean.
I'd go with numerophile, but I've seen it as numberphile.
There are 107 numerical palindromes between the numbers 1 and 1000, starting from 2 to 999.
The word is correctly spelled "skewed" meaning distorted or out of line, as with numerical values or sequences. The similar word is askew.
1661 is a palindromic number.
You call it a palindromic sentence. If it isn't a sentence it is a palindromic phrase or palindromic sequence.
There are not just 13 non-palindromic numbers. Most numbers are non-palindromic.
"Palindromic" is the adjective form of "palindrome."