dyslexia in English

noun
1
a general term for disorders that involve difficulty in learning to read or interpret words, letters, and other symbols, but that do not affect general intelligence.
The youngster, who suffers from dyslexia and severe learning difficulties, no longer attends school or college.

Use "dyslexia" in a sentence

Below are sample sentences containing the word "dyslexia" from the English Dictionary. We can refer to these sentence patterns for sentences in case of finding sample sentences with the word "dyslexia", or refer to the context using the word "dyslexia" in the English Dictionary.

1. Donations made to Dyslexia Advocation, Inc

2. She has read all about dyslexia.

3. Balbriggan Dyslexia Workshop Based in St Molaga’s N.S

4. This can be difficult for those with dyslexia.

5. Had some form of dyslexia or word-blindness.

6. This turns out to be of major importance in dyslexia.

7. Crested registration in Categories DSP, LSC or SPS is a criterion for schools taking children of services personnel through the Children’s Education Advisory Service (CEAS). Crested: a recognition going beyond a specialism Our work is supported by British Dyslexia Association, Dyslexia Action, Dyslexia-SpLD Trust & Helen Arkell Dyslexia Charity

8. Dyslexia Tracks - Autumns x Broken English Club by Autumns

9. This pattern of acquired dyslexia is in fact seen.

10. Alexia and dyslexia are terms that are often used interchangeably

11. The Learning Support service gave me excellent help with my dyslexia.

12. Overcame childhood dyslexia to graduate second in his high - school class.

13. Dyslexia may be caused by a brain abnormality involving the sense of sight.

14. Which of these various possibilities provides the correct interpretation for surface dyslexia?

15. 23 Overcame childhood dyslexia to graduate second in his high - school class.

16. 2000, Torleiv Høien, Per Sundberg, Dyslexia: From Theory to Intervention (page 13) Auditive dyslexia is characterized by great difficulties with the sounds of spoken language.

17. It is hard to estimate how many children suffer from dyslexia.

18. Alexia is a form of dyslexia but dyslexia is developmental, meaning that it does not happen from an occurrence such as a stroke or traumatic brain injury

19. So which of these two patterns does one actually see in surface dyslexia?

20. I used to put so much time and energy in trying to overcome my dyslexia.

21. The wrong approach to reading, she says, is to blame for dyslexia and word blindness.

22. Alexia is an acquired deficit in the ability to interpret written language; does not refer to those impairments (congenital or acquired early in life) which prevent the normal acquisition of reading skills (which are considered developmental dyslexia or simply dyslexia); HISTORY

23. Can damaged networks, for example, help us understand reading errors experienced by humans suffering from dyslexia?

24. Dyslexia takes an immense toll in lost productivity, thwarted careers, frustration, depression and other behavioral problems.

25. While causes of dyslexia remain obscure, there is growing evidence that it is neurological in nature.

26. Other symptoms of dyslexia can include difficulty in writing, calculating or even understanding the spoken word.

27. Two approaches have been taken to the interpretation of deep dyslexia in relation to models of normal reading.

28. She drew the dole for more than four years after leaving school with no qualifications after suffering from dyslexia.

29. Luigi's Coloured Reading Strips are made for persons who suffer from Dyslexia, Irlen Syndrome, ADHD and visual stress

30. The development of neuroimaging technologies during the 1980s and 1990s enabled dyslexia research to make significant advances.

31. Our Skills Centre can help you with any personal study skill from time-management to overcoming dyslexia.

32. Alphabet soup Four key findings suggest that dyslexia is an organic problem rather than a motivational one.

33. This contrasts with developmental dyslexia which is an impairment, possibly congenital, in learning to read in the first place.

34. A number of other functional deficits such as dyslexia, dysgraphia, acalculia, apraxia can also frequently be found.

35. We aimed to test children with developmental dyslexia for possible alterations of their spatial and visuoperceptual ability.

36. Read in studio More than fifty children with dyslexia have lobbied councillors to keep their school open.

37. Any claim of a new treatment for dyslexia is certain to be controversial, in part because the stakes are so high.

38. The Baltimore-based society defines dyslexia as a type of learning disability that revolves around difficulty in processing language.

39. One of the effects of dyslexia, in my case at least, is that you pay tremendous attention to detail.

40. While studies indicate abnormal brain development and function, dyslexia is not linked to general intelligence or lack of the desire to learn.

41. Rapid Automatized Naming and Rapid Alternating Stimulus assessments (RAN/RAS) APS Annual Dyslexia Conference: Saturday, October 13, 2018 Presented by: Jennifer Brown

42. And the proposals are likely to contain guidelines for teachers dealing with dyslexia and other reading problems in the classroom.

43. However, developmental dyslexia, a problem with learning how to read and write in the first place, is different from acquired Alexia

44. The masculine gender is used in this article because boys are three times more likely than girls to be diagnosed with dyslexia and hyperactivity.

45. For example , they may have good access for physically - disabled pupils or special teaching for pupils with hearing or sight difficulties or dyslexia .

46. Damberg has had a successful career in the arts as a painter, Copyist, and restorationist, despite setbacks in school and many aspects of daily life caused by his dyslexia.

47. Kyriakos Seraphim known as Riakos, has Dyslexia that manifests itself on the down side as being Anorthographic in both mother languages English and Greek, but it also gives his mind an

48. Dyslexia is a disorder characterized by problems with the visual notation of speech, which in most languages of European origin are problems with alphabet writing systems which have a phonetic construction.

49. FLIC (Foreign Language Acquisition with the Instinct of a Child) uses techniques first developed for assisting those with dyslexia, and applies them to adults keen to learn new languages.

50. Pure Alexia, also known as agnosic Alexia or Alexia without agraphia or pure word blindness, is one form of Alexia which makes up "the peripheral dyslexia" group