Anadrome
Anadrome is a linguistic term describing a word that forms another valid word when its letters are read backward. A pair of such words is called an anadrome pair, and the two words in the pair are reversals of each other. This concept is distinct from a palindrome, where the entire string reads the same forward and backward, whereas anadromes yield two different words.
Common examples include drawer and reward, live and evil, and nametag and gateman. These pairs illustrate how
Etymology and usage of the term are somewhat informal. The word anadrome is generally believed to be
In practice, anadromes are relatively rare in English, because many reversals yield nonsensical strings or nonwords.