Question:

Is there a recognised condition such as verbal dyslexia?

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i.e. Know the word that you want to use but saying it incorrectly. Not just mispronounced but changing it is so that the word said is only approximately like the one that you meant. Generally causing laughter in social situations

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  1. It is not verbal dyslexia.  You maybe talking about Aphasia. Aphasia is a problem of language and communication. Aphasia can make it difficult to understand speech or to produce speech. It may also affect reading and writing ability. Aphasia is common after a stroke, affecting about 30% of people. A person with aphasia often has word retrieval issues. From example, Did you see the rabbit jump over the chair? When they wanted to say Did you see the cat jump over the chair?  

    The term dyspraxia is also used meaning the same as Aphasia.

    Dysphagia is sometimes called a deep dyslexia but honestly, I have never heard a speech therapist or doctor call it that. Dysphagia, or difficulty swallowing, is a condition that can be brought on by many different causes. And symptoms can vary widely. Some people with dysphasia may have minor irritation when swallowing, while others may have difficulty swallowing liquids alone, certain types of foods, or even their own saliva. In severe cases, dysphagia can make swallowing impossible.


  2. Here is an Odd answer- it might prove to be correct someday.  From autism old working autism the building blocks of the human mind.  

    Keep in mind this theory although proven time and again has never been in a text book before. When we think autisitcally and eventually normally as we learn our sub thoughts there is a perfect explanation for getting words messed up and indeed dyslexia in general. If our thoery holds water and Autism is proven to be the building blocks of the human mind we have seen the very thought process that humans use to form words and thoughts. Simply put If you put a slide in a projector backwards you get a funny picutre or in this case a funny word. Autism Sub thoughts need convereted to words and speech and if our thoughts are not complete  we translate the wrong things and it presents as "dyslexia" stuttering and many other things.

    If science sould hook a monitor to our brain during the lack of eye contact they would see we are thinking in picutres and also  see how we convert those words to normal thoughts  Once we learn the autism thoughts your normal ones seem doabale.  Old Autistc people had much better chances of discovereing this as we were not diagnosed and our Splinter skills were our medium to do it- Splinter Skills were the very frist thing the Autism Experts abolished in Autism. Mankind has been cheated ever since.

    Rich Shull host of the Blog Pre Rain Man Autism - inventor of The Turing Motor  a 70 % Efficent Green Car motor.

  3. It is usually called a "Malapropism" after a character called Mrs Malaprop in an 18th century play by Sheridan called The Rivals.

  4. No, not as such.  People who suffer dyslexia experience verbal problems, but there is not a separate term for this, such as 'verbal dyslexia,' it is all connected to the brain dysfunctions which produce the various types of dyslexia.

    Quite simply, what passes through the mind at a phenomenal speed, cannot be expressed verbally at the same rate.

    People who suffer this might start the beginning of sentences with the end. This is due to their mind working at a much more rapid rate than the mouth can muster.

    It's all part of dyslexia

  5. yeah having babies does that to you!

  6. lamponetrasd sliderwoq shippy ew ew tre llo

    ewrer juddy frudde pah pah pooray ko

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