longestsegnol
Since palindrome denotes a word that reads the same forwards as backwards, a one-digit palindrome would not make sense.
That would be 26 . . . its square is 676.There are two smaller palindromic squares . . . 121 and 484 ... but they're the squares of11 and 22 respectively, which are palindromic, so they flunk the question's specifications.
racecar
The one-word palindrome that best fits that definition would be peep.
A palindrome for Robert's nickname would be "Bob." It reads the same forwards and backwards, just like a palindrome should. So there you have it, Bob is the palindrome for Robert's nickname.
pep of course
"A woman in a convent" itself would give no palindrome, but "Nun" would give a palindrome as it is the same spelled forwards and backwards.
A palindrome for a prank would be a gag because it is spelled the same forwards or backwards.
That would be a radar.
Since palindrome denotes a word that reads the same forwards as backwards, a one-digit palindrome would not make sense.
That would be 26 . . . its square is 676.There are two smaller palindromic squares . . . 121 and 484 ... but they're the squares of11 and 22 respectively, which are palindromic, so they flunk the question's specifications.
racecar
A slang palindrome for "mister" would be "revver," which is a reversed version of the original word.
The palindrome of "related to citizenship" would be "hip gnizi tic ot detaler."
The one-word palindrome that best fits that definition would be peep.
A palindrome for Robert's nickname would be "Bob." It reads the same forwards and backwards, just like a palindrome should. So there you have it, Bob is the palindrome for Robert's nickname.
That would be a pip.