An anadrome[1][2][3][4][a] is a word or phrase whose letters can be reversed to spell a different word or phrase. For example, desserts is an anadrome of stressed. An anadrome is therefore a special type of anagram. The English language is replete with such words.
The word anadrome comes from Greek anádromos (ἀνάδρομος), "running backward", and can be compared to palíndromos (παλίνδρομος), "running back again" (whence palindrome).
There is a long history (dating at least to the fourteenth century, as with Trebor and S. Uciredor) of alternate and invented names being created out of anadromes of real names; such a contrived proper noun is sometimes called an ananym, especially if it is used as personal pseudonym. Unlike typical anadromes, these anadromic formations often do not conform to any real names or words. Similarly cacographic anadromes are also characteristic of Victorian back slang, where for example yob stands for boy.
Examples
editThe English language has a very large number of single-word anadromes, by some counts more than 900.[3] Some examples:
- two letters: am ↔ ma; eh ↔ he; ew ↔ we; no ↔ on
- three letters: bro ↔ orb; dog ↔ god; gum ↔ mug; nip ↔ pin
- four letters: edit ↔ tide; evil ↔ live; liar ↔ rail; part ↔ trap
- five letters: denim ↔ mined; knits ↔ stink; lever ↔ revel; peels ↔ sleep
- six letters: denier ↔ reined; diaper ↔ repaid; drawer ↔ reward; pupils ↔ slip-up
- seven letters: amaroid ↔ diorama; deliver ↔ reviled; gateman ↔ nametag
- eight letters: desserts ↔ stressed
An anadrome can also be a phrase, as in no tops ↔ spot on. The word redrum (i.e., "red rum") is used this way for murder in the Stephen King novel The Shining (1977) and its film adaptation (1980).[11]
Anadromes exist in other written languages as well, as can be seen, for example, in Spanish orar ↔ raro or French l'ami naturel ("the natural friend") ↔ le rut animal ("the animal rut").
Invented anadromes
editanadrome | derivation | description | references |
---|---|---|---|
daraf | farad | a unit of elastance equal to the reciprocal farad | |
emirp | prime | a prime number that results in a different prime when its digits are reversed | |
gnip gnop | ping pong | reminiscent of the other tabletop game | |
mho | ohm | a unit of electrical conductance which is the reciprocal of an ohm; now known by its official SI name "siemens", although mho is still sometimes used | [12] |
namyats | Stayman | bridge convention invented by Sam Stayman, who also invented the Stayman convention. | [13] |
nimda | admin | the computer worm assumed admin-like powers. | |
tink | knit | to unknit | |
xallarap | parallax | converse microlensing effect | |
yrneh | henry | A unit of measurement for reciprocal electrical inductance. |
Ananyms and anadromic names
editananym | derivation | description | type | references |
---|---|---|---|---|
Adanac | Canada | a tourist cottage in Ontario | proper name | |
Adanac[s] | Canada | a Canadian lacrosse team | team name | |
Adaven | Nevada | ghost town | proper name | |
Airegin | Nigeria | composer Sonny Rollins is African American | song name | |
Allerednic | Cinderella | A "riches to rags" tale as opposed to Cinderella's rags to riches. Used by Jonathan Gershuny of high-achieving women whose careers stall after marriage. | proper name | [14] |
Alucard | Dracula | borne by various characters inspired by Bram Stoker's novel Dracula (1897) | proper name | [15] |
Ani Lorak | Karolina | stage name of Karolina Kuiek | pseudonym | |
Azed | Deza | pen name of Jonathan Crowther, after Spanish inquisitor Diego Deza | pseudonym | [16] |
[C. W.] Ceram | Marec | pen name of German journalist K. W. Marek (latinized Marec) | pseudonym | [17] |
Dioretsa | asteroid | asteroid with retrograde orbit | proper name | [18] |
Dnoces | "second" | Apollo program joke by Grissom, after Edward H. White II | proper name | [19] |
Ebbot [Lundberg] | Tobbe | Tobbe is the usual hypocoristic of his given name Torbjörn | pseudonym | |
Eivets Rednow | Stevie Wonder | album name | [15] | |
elgooG | reverse-spelling search engine | company name | ||
Navi | Ivan | Apollo program joke by Virgil Ivan Grissom | proper name | [19] |
Erewhon | "nowhere" | A utopia and the title of an 1872 novel by Samuel Butler. The digraph <wh> is not reversed. Many names within the book are also ananyms. | proper name | [5][20] |
Erised | "desire " | The Mirror of Erised in Harry Potter and the Philosopher's Stone bears the inscription in reverse: "I show not your face but your heart's desire." | proper name | [21] |
Esio Trot | "tortoise" | children's book by Roald Dahl | book name | |
Essiac | Rene Caisse | tea formula invented by Rene Caisse | product name | |
Etnaviv | Vivante | open-source driver for Vivante GPU | product name | |
Regor | Roger | Apollo program joke by Grissom, after Roger B. Chaffee | proper name | [19] |
Гярб вечнълс (Giarb vechnals) | Слънчев бряг (Slanchev briag, "Sunny Beach") | Bulgarian Cyrillic ananym | proper name | |
Harpo [Productions] | Oprah | Oprah Winfrey's media company | company name | [5] |
Klim | "milk" | a brand of powdered milk sold by Nestlé, early ads featuring the slogan "Spell it backwards" | product name | [22] |
Kroz | Zork | homage to older computer game | product name | |
Livic | "civil [engineering]" | trade newspaper, "a reflection of Civil Engineering" | company name | [23] |
Llamedos | "sod 'em all" | in Terry Pratchett's Discworld novels (compare Llareggub) | proper name | |
Llareggub | "bugger all" | in Under Milk Wood | proper name | [5] |
MAPS (Mail Abuse Prevention System) | "spam" | reverse backronym | organization name | |
Nagirroc | Corrigan | historic home in Florida, after the owner's last name | proper name | |
Namor | "Roman" | comic book character named by Bill Everett | proper name | |
Nevaeh | "heaven" | feminine given name | proper name | |
Nevar | "raven" | In the 2002 TV series Raven, Nevar is the nemesis of the main character. It is also a minor character in an episode of Teen Titans Go! (see Bizarro World). (It is also a possible answer to Lewis Carroll's Mad Hatter riddle in Alice's Adventures in Wonderland.) | proper name | [24] |
Niloak Pottery | "kaolin" | material used in products | company name | |
Nitsuga | Agustín | stage name of Agustín Barrios-Mangoré | pseudonym | |
Nogard | "dragon" | character in Alan F. Beck art series The Adventures of Nogard & Jackpot | proper name | [25] |
Nomad | Damon | named for founding member Damon Rochefort | band name | |
Nomar [Garciaparra] | Ramon | for his father, Ramon Garciaparra | proper name | |
Nujabes | Seba Jun | stage name of Jun Seba | pseudonym | |
OAT (organizing autonomous telecomms) | TAO (The Anarchy Organization) | OAT stands for "Organizing Autonomous Telecomms", a reverse backronym of its former name TAO, "The Anarchy Organization" | organization name | |
Posdnuos | "sound sop" | stage name of Kelvin Mercer | pseudonym | [26] |
Rednaxela Terrace, Hong Kong | Alexander | believed to have been originally named after a Mr. Alexander, who partially owned the street, but reversed due to a clerical error | proper name | [27][28] |
Rekkof Aircraft | Fokker | Rekkof aircraft are based on Fokker designs. Also Rekkof Restart. Now Fokker Next Gen. | company name | [29] |
Rellim | Miller | a farm in West Virginia, named for founder Paul Miller | proper name | |
Revilo | Oliver | pen name of cartoonist Oliver Christianson | pseudonym | |
Revilo [P. Oliver] | [Revilo P.] Oliver | Revilo was philologist Revilo P. Oliver's name at birth | proper name | |
Ridan | Nadir | named after another horse | proper name | |
로꾸거 (Rokuko) | 거꾸로 (gokkuro) | backwards for Korean for "backwards" | song name | |
Rotanev | Venator | after Niccolò Cacciatore (Nicolaus Venator in Latin) | proper name | [30] |
Seltaeb | Beatles | the Beatles' merchandising company | company name | [15] |
Senim Silla | "All is mines." | stage name of hip hop artist Ross Rowe; "mines" is African-American Vernacular for "mine" | pseudonym | [31] |
Senrab [Street] | Barnes | a street in Stepney (whence Senrab F.C.), near Barnes Street | proper name | |
Sevas Tra | "Art saves." | debut album of Otep | album name | |
Soma [Records] | Amos | after owner Amos Heilicher | company name | |
Strebor | Roberts | altered from the company's original name, the Roberts Company | company name | |
Sualocin | Nicolaus | after Niccolò Cacciatore (Nicolaus Venator in Latin) | proper name | [30] |
Tesremos | Somerset | pen name of Derrick Somerset Macnutt | pseudonym | [32] |
Tebloc | Colbert | place in Mississippi, named for a local family, whose name is found in many places, and thus altered "to avoid further repetition" | proper name | [33] |
Trebor | Robert | 14th-century composer whose real name may have been Robert | pseudonym | |
Trebor | Robert | Trebor is a confectionary founded by Robert Robertson | company name | |
Trebor | Robert | Robert Trebor is the stage name of actor Robert Schenkman. | pseudonym | |
Trebor and Werdna | Robert [Woodhead] and Andrew [C. Greenberg] | characters in Wizardry: Proving Grounds of the Mad Overlord computer game named after its programmers | proper name | |
Trugoy [the Dove] | "yogurt" | stage name of David Jude Jolicoeur, due to his fondness for yogurt | pseudonym | [34] |
Xvid | DivX | a competitor | company name | |
Yarg | Gray | Allan and Jenny Gray revived the recipe | product name | |
Yellek | Kelley | named for R. J. Kelley, trainmaster at the passing point | proper name | |
[Stanley] Yelnats | Stanley [Yelnats] | the main character in Louis Sachar's novel Holes | proper name | |
Yen Sid | Disney | the powerful sorcerer in Fantasia (1940), whose apprentice Mickey Mouse causes mayhem after borrowing his master's hat | proper name | [35] |
Many jazz titles were written by reversing names or nouns: Ecaroh inverts the spelling of its composer Horace Silver's Christian name. Sonny Rollins dedicated to Nigeria a tune called "Airegin".
See also
edit- Back slang, use of invented anadromes as coded language
- Anagram
- Palindrome
- List of geographic anagrams and ananyms
- Category:Names derived from word reversals
Notes
edit- ^ Also called (often humorously) a semordnilap[5] or emordnilap,[6] and sometimes called a levidrome.
- Semordnilap is an anadrome of palindromes. According to author O. V. Michaelsen in his 1997 book Words at Play, semordnilap was probably first used by recreational linguist Dmitri Borgmann, cited by Martin Gardner in the revised edition of Charles Carroll Bombaugh's Oddities and Curiosities of Words and Literature (1961).[7]
- Levi Budd, a boy from Toronto, Canada, coined levidrome in 2017, and there were attempts to get it recognized by Merriam-Webster and Oxford English Dictionary.[8] In 2018, Oxford replied that it is still not ready.[9] As of 2021, it is still being requested.[10]
References
edit- Room, Adrian (2010-07-26). Dictionary of Pseudonyms: 13,000 Assumed Names and Their Origins. McFarland. ISBN 978-0-7864-4373-4. Retrieved 15 January 2011.
- ^ Brunton, Finn (November–December 2010). "Roar so wildly: Spam, technology and language" (PDF). Radical Philosophy (164): 6. Retrieved December 13, 2024.
Bifacial text, a kind of anadrome which reads with two distinct meanings when read forward or backward.
- ^ Kragh, Helge (2024). The Names of Science: Terminology and Language in the History of the Natural Sciences. Oxford: Oxford University Press. p. 255.
As the first case of a retrograde asteroid [Dioretsa] was named as an anadrome, namely asteroid spelled backwards.
- ^ a b Sutherland, Denise (2020). Solving Cryptic Crosswords for Dummies. John Wiley & Sons Australia, Ltd. p. 61.
These sorts of two-way words are called anadromes, and roughly 900 of them exist in everyday English.
- ^ Luschnig, Cecelia Eaton; Luschnig, Lance J. (2017). Etyma II: An Introduction to Vocabulary Building from Latin and Greek. Lanham, Maryland: Hamilton Books. p. 307.
The other side of Palindrome is semordnilap. [...] These are also called anadromes.
- ^ a b c d updated, Arika Okrent last (April 29, 2014). "9 words created by spelling other words backwards". theweek.
- ^ "Is 'Emordnilap' a Real Word?". Snopes. 13 December 2014.
- ^ Bombaugh, Charles Carroll (1961). Oddities and Curiosities of Words and Literature. Dover Publications. p. 345.
- ^ "What is a "levidrome?" Merriam-Webster recognizes new word in honor of little boy". November 27, 2017.
- ^ "Latest word on 'levidrome': Oxford says it's not ready, but linguist begs to differ". Times Colonist. October 14, 2018.
- ^ "A Victoria 10-year-old created a word for a linguistic oddity. Over the past four years, it's come to mean so much more". Capital Daily.
- ^ Lederer, Richard (1998). The Word Circus: A Letter-perfect Book. Springfield, Massachusetts: Merriam-Webster, Inc. p. 89.
- ^ "Definition of MHO". www.merriam-webster.com.
- ^ "Namyats (4C, 4D, 4H, 4S) - Bridge Bidding Convention". BridgeHands. Petaluma, California. 22 January 2011. Retrieved 10 May 2016.
- ^ Gershuny, Jonathan (1999). "Time Budgets, Life Histories and Social Position". Quality and Quantity. 33 (3): 277–289. doi:10.1023/A:1004648804214. S2CID 142779389.; Langdon, Julia (13 August 2000). "Cherie Booth: Now you see her, now you don't". The Independent. Archived from the original on 2019-04-23. Retrieved 23 April 2019.; Hay, Hannah Furness (31 May 2013). "Hay Festival 2013: Working women are Cinderella in reverse". Retrieved 23 April 2019.
- ^ a b c Honeycutt, Curtis. "Grammar Guy: A look back at backward words". Savannah Morning News.
- ^ Room (2010), p.40
- ^ Room (2010), p.99
- ^ "20461 Dioretsa (1999 LD31)". Minor Planet Center. Retrieved 20 November 2018.
- ^ a b c Harland, David Michael (2007). The first men on the moon: the story of Apollo 11. Springer. p. 136. ISBN 978-0-387-34176-7. Retrieved 22 February 2011.
- ^ Balfour Daniels, R. (Winter 1969). "Names in the Fiction of Samuel Butler (1835-1902)". The South Central Bulletin. 29 (4). Johns Hopkins University Press, South Central Modern Language Association: 129–132. doi:10.2307/3187333. JSTOR 3187333.
- ^ Jeelani, Hasina (November 16, 2021). "What we can learn about self-love from the Mirror of Erised in 'Harry Potter and the Philosopher's Stone'". Vogue India.
- ^ Smedley, Emma (1920). The school lunch: its organization and management in Philadelphia. Emma Smedley. p. 171.
- ^ "Livic at three years old". 23 March 2007.
- ^ "The Story Behind Lewis Carroll's Unsolvable Riddle". Mental Floss. September 12, 2021.
- ^ Alan F. Beck, The Adventures of Nogard & Jackpot , 2009. ISBN 978-1449519391
- ^ https://www.washingtonpost.com/archive/lifestyle/1989/05/18/de-la-souls-mind-bending-rap/af8f9493-1894-41e2-88f2-ed2057247d0b/
- ^ Yanne, Andrew; Heller, Gillis (2009). Signs of a Colonial Era. Hong Kong University Press. p. 143. ISBN 9789622099449.
- ^ "Stories behind Hong Kong street names: Rednaxela Terrace and its famous resident". South China Morning Post. 8 July 2016.
- ^ "Fokker's Back in the Airplane-Building Game - CBS News". CBS News. 10 March 2010.
- ^ a b Ridpath, Ian; Tirion, Wil (2007). Stars and planets: the most complete guide to the stars, planets, galaxies, and the solar system. Princeton University Press. p. 140. ISBN 978-0-691-13556-4.
- ^ Crazy Illa Wulf (May 2007). "Senim Silla: return of a star". platform8470. Gistel, Belgium. Archived from the original on 27 August 2008. Retrieved 22 February 2011.
- ^ Room (2010), p.517
- ^ Phelps, Dawson A.; Edward Hunter Ross (Fall 1952). "Names Please: Place Names along the Natchez Trace" (PDF). The Journal of Mississippi History. 14. Mississippi Department of Archives and History, Mississippi Historical Society: 240. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2010-10-07. Retrieved 2011-01-15.
- ^ "De La Soul co-founder Trugoy the Dove dead at 54". AP News. February 12, 2023. Retrieved February 13, 2023.
- ^ Koehler, Dorene (2017). The Mouse and the Myth: Sacred Art and Secular Ritual of Disneyland. Indiana University Press. p. 161.
External links
edit- The dictionary definition of anadrome at Wiktionary