A palindrome is a word or sequence that is the same when in reverse order. What this question refers to is not a palindrome. (to be continued)
A word that spells another word when spelled backwards is called a "semordnilap." This term is "palindromes" in reverse, referencing words that form different words when spelled backwards. For example, "stressed" spells "desserts" when reversed.
A word that is the same spelled backwards and forwards is called a palindrome.
A word that can be spelled the same way forwards and backwards is called a palindrome.
When a word can be spelled the same way forwards and backwards, it is called a palindrome.
The word 'pans' spelled backwards is 'snap'.
The word "level" spelled backwards reads as "level".
Palindromes
They are called palindromes.
palindrome
Dad Pop Abba
The term for a name, word, or phrase that is spelled the same forward and backwards is a "palindrome". Examples : Anna, Otto, radar, racecar
Words or phrases that produce the same word(s) when spelled backward are called palindromes. However, there is no specific widely-accepted term that identifies words that are the reverse spelling of other, different words. They would be a unique form of an anagram of the word or phrase.Some suggested terms aresemordnilapsvolvogramsanadromesheteropalindromessemi-palindromeshalf-palindromesreversgramsmynoretehsreversible anagramsword reversals
A palindrome is a word that is the spelled the same forwards and backwards...Examples... racecar and level
The generally accepted English word for a word which forms another word when read backwards is "anadrome" - from the Greek words ανα, meaning "backwards" and δρόμος, meaning "course" or "road".
A word that is spelled the same both forwards and backwards is referred to as a Palindrome.
A reversible word, or a word that is spelled the same forwards as it is backwards, is called a "palindrome." This term can also be applied to numbers or entire phrases.
A reversible word, or a word that is spelled the same forwards as it is backwards, is called a "palindrome." This term can also be applied to numbers or entire phrases.
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