English

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Etymology

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A reverse spelling of palindromes. "Semordnilap", according to author O. V. Michaelsen in his 1997 book Words at Play, 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) [1]. The underlying concept (but not the term) is found at least as far back as Lewis Carroll's Sylvie and Bruno (1889). Semordnilap is also autological; that is, it is a self-describing word, as the word semordnilap is itself a semordnilap.

Pronunciation

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Noun

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Examples

semordnilap (plural semordnilaps)

  1. A word, phrase, or sentence that has the property of forming another word, phrase, or sentence when its letters are reversed. A semordnilap differs from a palindrome in that the word or phrase resulting from the reversal is different from the original word or phrase.
    • 1965, Dmitri Borgmann, Language on Vacation: An Olio of Orthological Oddities[2], page 42:
      [He] then goes on to credit us with giving him some of the best examples of semordnilaps.
    • 2000, Gail Smith, Celebrate the Piano, page 18:
      This song is a semordnilap. It can be played forward and then sounds different when it is played backwards.
    • 2008, Alex Pogel, David Ozonoff, “Contingency Structures and Concept Analysis”, in Medina & Obietkov, editors, Formal Concept Analysis, page 318:
      ACE is an acronym for Analysis of Concepts for Epidemiologists, and a semordnilap for ECA, Epidemiological Concept Analysis.

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