different between agrammatism vs acalculia
agrammatism
English
Etymology
From Ancient Greek ?????????? (agrámmatos, “illiterate”) +? -ism (English suffix).
Noun
agrammatism (countable and uncountable, plural agrammatisms)
- The inability to form sentences by virtue of a brain disorder.
- An ungrammatical utterance.
Related terms
- agrammatist
- grammar
- grammatical
Translations
See also
- acalculia
agrammatism From the web:
- what does agrammatism
acalculia
English
Etymology
From a- (negative prefix) + Latin calculare (“to calculate”) + -ia (“pathological condition”).
Pronunciation
- (Received Pronunciation) IPA(key): /?e?.kæl?kju?.l?.?/
- (US) IPA(key): /?e?.kæl?kju?.li.?/
Noun
acalculia (uncountable)
- (pathology) The condition of lacking basic mathematical skills caused by a brain injury, or more specifically an injury to the parietal lobe. [First attested in the early 20th century.]
Derived terms
- acalculiac
Related terms
- dyscalculia
Translations
See also
- agrammatism
References
Portuguese
Noun
acalculia f (uncountable)
- (pathology) acalculia (condition of lacking basic mathematical skills)
acalculia From the web:
- what does acalculia
- what is spatial acalculia
Share
Tweet
+1
Share
Pin
Like
Send
Share
you may also like
- agrammatism vs acalculia
- dyscalculia vs acalculia
- skill vs acalculia
- acalculia vs acalculiac
- terms vs grammatist
- grammatist vs agrammatist
- literature vs grammatist
- prose vs grammatist
- teacher vs grammatist
- agrammatist vs acalculiac
- skill vs acalculiac
- snaky vs snary
- terms vs snary
- scary vs snary
- nary vs snary
- smark vs smarm
- stark vs smark
- smark vs smart
- sark vs smark
- smirk vs smark