Well, the answer is simple. Try putting the first letter of each of these words at the end, and now read them in reverse, it will give the same word. E.g.: BANANA --> ANANAB. Or it can be said as, if you remove the first letter they become a palindrome.
- Varghese George
It appears that they all have at least two instances of repeating letters.
They are all a single letter followed by a palindrome, so that if you move the 1st letter to the end, you get the word spelled backwards. I.e. Banana = ananaB.
no potato
The plural form of the noun 'potato' is potatoes.
The word potato is a common noun.
It appears that they all have at least two instances of repeating letters.
They are all a single letter followed by a palindrome, so that if you move the 1st letter to the end, you get the word spelled backwards. I.e. Banana = ananaB.
No. what the hey?
Where did you learn grammar?
fructos
A Banana or Potato
apple >> banana > potato >>> strawberry.
When the initial letter is removed and added to the end, the word reads the same as it did originally, but from right to left. Eg, banana > ananab; potato > otatop; revive > eviver; dresser > resserd.
a banana can power a clock for a pretty long time, just like a potato can control the universe
The potato hates french fries and wanted to kill the banana
Mashed potato's. Hamburgers. French fries. Banana pudding. To name a few.
A medium banana has about 422 mg of potassium. A banana is a pretty good source of potassium. However it is not sensational. It has about the same potassium content per calorie as a potato. While it's true that the average potato has roughly as much potassium as a banana, boiling/mashing potatoes will remove a large portion of that potassium. So homemade mashed potatoes aren't as good of a source as, say, a baked potato is.