different between dyspraxic vs dyspraxia
dyspraxic
English
Etymology
dyspraxia +? -ic
Adjective
dyspraxic (comparative more dyspraxic, superlative most dyspraxic)
- Of or pertaining to dyspraxia
Derived terms
- dyspraxically
Noun
dyspraxic (plural dyspraxics)
- A person who has dyspraxia.
dyspraxic From the web:
- what dyspraxia
- what dyspraxia mean
- what dyspraxia symptoms
- what dyspraxia looks like
- what are dyspraxics good at
- what does dyspraxia
- what is dyspraxic tendencies
- what jobs can dyspraxics do
dyspraxia
English
Etymology
From Ancient Greek ????????? (duspraxí?, “ill success, ill luck”), after the pattern of apraxia
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /d?s?p?æksi?/
- Hyphenation: dys?prax?ia
Noun
dyspraxia (countable and uncountable, plural dyspraxias)
- (medicine) A genetic neurological disorder where a person has motor skills severely below average due to their brain's inability to consistently send messages accurately to the body for the planning of motor movements.
Derived terms
- dyspraxic
Translations
dyspraxia From the web:
- what dyspraxia looks like
- what dyspraxia mean
- what dyspraxia symptoms
- what dyspraxia in spanish
- what dyspraxia means in arabic
- dyspraxia what causes it
- dyspraxia what is it
- dyspraxia what are the signs
Share
Tweet
+1
Share
Pin
Like
Send
Share
you may also like
- dyspraxic vs dyspraxia
- problems vs dyspraxia
- perceptual vs dyspraxia
- constellated vs costellated
- costellated vs costellate
- terms vs monkery
- monkery vs mockery
- wonkery vs monkery
- monkey vs monkery
- boyar vs monkery
- editors vs monkery
- worshipping vs monkery
- editor vs monkery
- shine vs gimmer
- gimmer vs nimmer
- gimmer vs bimmer
- gammer vs gimmer
- gimmer vs gimme
- rimmer vs gimmer
- limmer vs gimmer