The most familiar palindromes, in English at least, are character-by-character: the written characters read the same backwards as forwards. Palindromes may consist of a single word (civic, level, racecar, rotator, Malayalam), or a phrase or sentence ("Neil, a trap! Sid is part alien!", "Was it a rat I saw?", "Mr. Owl ate my metal worm", "Sit on a potato pan, Otis", "Rats live on no evil star."). Spaces, punctuation and case are usually ignored. Three famous English palindromes are "Able was I ere I saw Elba"[2] (which is also palindromic with respect to spacing), "A man, a plan, a canal\u2014Panama!\u201d,[3] and \u201cMadam, in Eden I'm Adam,\u201d.[4] The last example is still palindromic if "in Eden" is left out, as it often is. Some individuals have names that are palindromes. Some changed their name in order to be a palindrome (one example is actor Robert Trebor), while others were given a palindromic name at birth (such as Neo-Nazi philologist Revilo Oliver).