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.
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.
If you mean: Is the sentence "Is this grammar right?" grammatically correct (or right), then yes, it is.
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
to objectively assess subordinates, leaders do the following
To assess composite risk management, there is an assessment of risk. These risks are followed and minimized to control the probability of unfortunate events.
Please provide the options for me to accurately assess which statement you are referring to.
fizz test
internal auditors
assess situation for danger
The grammar school test is generally not that difficult. It really depends on your strengths and weaknesses in English. If you read lots of different genres of books and love writing then you will most likely have very good grammar.
No."Assess" is a verb, so "assesses" is the third person singular form: "Bill assesses property," "She assesses property." The first and second person singular form, and the plural form, is "assess": "I assess property," "You assess property," "We assess property," "Don and Sheila assess property."