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Перевод: dyslexia speek dyslexia


[существительное]
дислексия


Тезаурус:

  1. Although the main result of dyslexia is the inability to read, there is a hidden problem in the damage dyslexia does to a child's confidence, said Mr Bland.
  2. "From time to time my typing suffers from dyslexia," confesses Kingsley Amis.
  3. In her reply, Heim stresses the uncertainties of the case, and emphasises the possibility that Mr X's apparent subnormality may have been linked to dyslexia, rather than a low IQ.
  4. Malcolm, who is statemented, and has "severe learning difficulties" (as the educational psychologist puts it) or who is "dyslexic" (as his parents, encouraged by the local Dyslexia Institute, put it) or whom "you just can't do anything with" (as several of his teachers have put it), mouths the words as Beth reads and smiles broadly as she finishes.
  5. This contrasts with developmental dyslexia which is an impairment, possibly congenital, in learning to read in the first place.
  6. The word dyslexia became a familiar label even though it did not in itself provide miraculous remedies for learning difficulties.
  7. The dual-route model of reading is thus able not only to explain an existing set of data within a simple theoretical model, it also successfully pinpointed the existence of an entirely new type of acquired dyslexia.
  8. If the thresholds from logogen system to cognitive system were sometimes or always lower than the thresholds from logogen system to cognitive system , one could then explain subception (gaining access to the meaning of a word without being able to report the word) and also semantic errors which occur in the condition known as deep dyslexia in which single printed words are often incorrectly read as semantically related words, e.g. reading storm as thunder .
  9. Most such nonsense has sunk without trace - though the odd bubbles will keep rising to the surface, especially since the invention of educational (as opposed to clinical) dyslexia, when many well-meaning teachers have attempted to devise schemes of their own to help slow learners.
  10. This pattern had never been noticed before, but as soon as researchers started looking for it, several case studies of what is now known as phonological dyslexia were reported in rapid succession in the early 1980s.
  11. The syndrome of deep dyslexia (see Coltheart, Patterson and Marshall, 1980) is characterised by certain kinds of errors which the patient makes when unable to read aloud particular words.
  12. His Honour said that J's dyslexia "would appear to give him significantly greater difficulty in learning than the majority of children of his age", and that J's high intelligence was "neither here nor there" in relation to the specific cause of the learning difficulty.
  13. According to the Dyslexia Institute, at least one child in 20 suffers from dyslexia, an inherited disability in the brain which affects their recognition and "processing" of letters and symbols.

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