VOA Standard English
VOA Special English
VOA English Learning
Forget the Gunplay, These Cowboys Get Their Kicks From Wordplay
» Download Audio

AA: I'm Avi Arditti with Rosanne Skirble, and this week on WORDMASTER: palindromes aplenty.

RS: A palindrome is something that reads the same backwards or forwards. Palindromes make us think of Janus, the Roman god with one face looking forward and another looking backward.

AA: And from Janus we get January, and from that we get the idea to rerun "The Ballad of Palindrome" each New Year.

RS: It features a skit that spoofs a cowboy show on television in the 1950s called "Paladin." Here now is the group Riders in the Sky joined by singer and songwriter Johnny Western.

Riders in the Sky
SOUND: "The Ballad of Palindrome/Palindrome: The Scene with Johnny Western"

RS: That's Riders in the Sky from their 1998 album "A Great Big Western HOWDY!" on the Rounder Records label.

AA: And that's WORDMASTER for this week. Our e-mail address is word@voanews.com, and our segments are all online at voanews.com/wordmaster. Wishing you a happy and healthy New Year, with Rosanne Skirble, I'm Avi Arditti.

  1. Five New Year's Resolutions for Learners to Improve Their English
  2. Words of 2007, From 'Surge' to 'Left of Boom' to 'E-Mail Bankruptcy'
  3. A Fast Way to Make Yourself a Better Understood Speaker? Slow Down
  4. Take a Deep Breath: Tips on Preparing for an Oral Presentation
  5. Talking Dictionaries on Web Offer an Earful of Pronunciations
  6. Meet a Labor Lawyer Whose Labor of Love Is Writing About Slang
  7. Compounding Makes All the Difference Between a Black Bird and a Blackbird
  8. Group Led by Seattle Writer Promotes Good (Not Perfect) Grammar
  9. What Aphorists Have to Say About the Cultures That Produced Them
  10. Aphorisms: How a Few Words Can Speak Volumes About Life and Living