Showing 1 - 8 results of 8 for search '"Homophone"', query time: 0.03s Refine Results
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    Acquired Surface Alexia in Spanish: A Case Report by Aldo R. Ferreres, Macarena Martinez Cuitiño, Alicia Olmedo

    Published 2005-01-01
    “…Patient MM has surface alexia characterized by quantitatively good performance in reading words and pseudowords; accurate but slow and syllabic reading of words, nonwords and sentences; good performance in lexical decision tasks including words and nonwords; errors in lexical decision with pseudohomophones; and homophone confusions. This pattern of reading can be interpreted as a disorder in the lexical reading route and overdependence on the non-lexical route. …”
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    Two Forms of Palilalia: A Clinicoanatomical Study by M. Ikeda, H. Tanabe

    Published 1992-01-01
    “…“Spasmodic, heterophonic palilalia” is typically observed in Parkinson's syndrome and pseudobulbar palsy: the content of palilalia is characteristically changed by interruption. “Atonic, homophonic, autoecholalic palilalia” is mainly seen in Pick's disease, and is not affected by external interruption.…”
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    Non-Native Listeners’ Use of Information in Parsing Ambiguous Casual Speech by Natasha Warner, Daniel Brenner, Benjamin V. Tucker, Mirjam Ernestus

    Published 2025-01-01
    “…During conversation, speakers produce reduced speech, and this can create homophones: ‘we were’ and ‘we’re’ can both be realized as [ɚ], and ‘he was’ and ‘he’s’ can be realized as [ɨz]. …”
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    Remediation Effects on N170 and P300 in Children with Developmental Dyslexia by Mélanie Jucla, Rodolphe Nenert, Yves Chaix, Jean-François Demonet

    Published 2010-01-01
    “…At the same time, the opposite pattern occurred for the N170 latency, which was shortened for pseudo-words and pseudo-homophones in the dyslexic group and for words in the typically achieving children. …”
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    Observations on old Serbian terminology for iron mining and processing: Želězo and gvozdje by Loma Aleksandar B.

    Published 2024-01-01
    “…., the one by which their hammer mills were situated, where the second element is the old genitive plural of *želěznikъ ‘ironsmith’, which is homophonous with its nominative singular form. The word železník in this sense, apparently calqued on Middle High German îsensmit, is attested in Old Czech, wherefrom it appears to have spread to Slovenia (place name Železniki) and perhaps also to the medieval Serbia, where the development of mining can be traced back to the mid-thirteenth century owing to the German settlers (OSerb Sasi, ‘Saxons’); presumably a part of them originated from the Czech lands; at least their first settlement on the Serbian soil, Brskovo, seems to have been named after Brzkov in the mining district around Jihlava (Iglau), on the historical border between Bohemia and Moravia. …”
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