Aphasia Mnemonic
Explore definitions and mnemonics for aphasia.
aphasia
aphasia
/əˈfeɪzɪə/
Examples
- An experimental approach to the problem of articulation in aphasia.
- Another such test is the Boston Diagnostic Aphasia Examination.
- Aphasia affects both the expression and reception of language.
- The effect of syntactic encoding on sentence comprehension in aphasia.
- The most common cause of expressive aphasia is stroke.
- There are different types of aphasia depending on the location of the damage.
- He was mostly blind and suffering from bouts of aphasia.
- The effect of Wernike's aphasia on understanding is much more severe.
- Understanding the link between bilingual aphasia and language control.
- Expressive aphasia is due to damage to the left front region of the brain.
inability to use or understand language (spoken or written) because of a brain lesion
noun
Definition 0 of 0
"A + Phrase + Uh. Lost for words, just saying 'uh'."
"A + Phase + Ya. A phase where ya can't find the right words to say."
Mnemonic 0 of 0