dysphasia
noun [ U ] language, medical specialized uk/dɪsˈfeɪ.ʒə/ us/dɪsˈfeɪ.ʒə/
言语障碍
a brain condition that makes a person have difficulties producing and sometimes understanding language
Ed has dysphasia, meaning he talks in slow, disjointed phrases. 埃德患有言语障碍,这意味着他说话的速度很慢,语句不连贯。
She was diagnosed at eight with dyslexia, dyspraxia and dysphasia, which affect her physical co-ordination and her ability to learn and remember. 她在8岁时被诊断出患有阅读障碍、运动障碍和言语障碍,这影响了她的身体协调性以及学习和记忆能力。
Compare: aphasia
- More examples
- His right arm is immobilized and he suffers from dysphasia: as he put it, "I can't remember my words."
- The patient exhibited clumsiness of the right hand and mild dysphasia.
- Dyslexia is closely related to dysphasia.
- His dysphasia means he speaks in fractured bursts, pausing between words and sometimes fighting to remember a phrase that's eluding him.
- They found that French-speaking children with developmental dysphasia have problems with the acquisition of object pronouns.