Please resubmit and rephrase the question. It is a jumble of words. Your question cannot be answered the way it is written now.
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. A palindrome is spelled the same forward and backward, like 'kayak'. 'river' backwards would be 'revir'
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.
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" .)
No.A palindrome must read the same backward as forward.For example, the word "Mom" is the same when read backward. Similarly, the phrase "Nurses run" is the same read backward though there are spaces which need not be considered.But, the word "River" is "Revir" backward which is not the same as "RiveR". SO, it is not a palindrome.