levidrome
English
Etymology
From Levi (word was coined by Levi Budd) + -drome by analogy with palindrome.[1]
Noun
levidrome (plural levidromes)
- A word with a different definition when the spelling is reversed, such as "pots" becoming "stop".[2][3][4][5]
- 2019 January 17, RJ Andrews, Info We Trust: How to Inspire the World with Data, page 53:
- Wherever sequential alphabets gained power, cultures became more transfixed by linear time. Change the order of the letters, and you get a new meaning: canoe is never mistaken for its anagram ocean. Map is not the same as its levidrome Pam.
Synonyms
References
- Jack Knox: This Budd’s for you, and he loves a ‘levidrome’
- B.C. boy's invented word gaining traction, celebrity endorsements
- Victoria boy’s new word, ‘levidrome,’ on its way to Oxford Dictionary
- Six-year-old Victoria boy’s invented word gets support from William Shatner, Patricia Arquette
- Oxford Dictionaries: Levidrome
Anagrams
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