i just thought of this, im a bit dyslexic (i think) but what if someone is not? then theyre lexic?
- 🐈⬛ (he/him)
Instructions unclear, I have become a lexer and now am in need of a parser and linker.
Okay, I can be your linker, now we only need a parser.
i shall be your parser
With our powers united we will summon Captain Planet!
eulexic, I would think
this should be a real thing for someone who can read really well and has an extensive vocabulary.
people with it are often in honors english classes and read a lot, and also figure out very minor implications of things based on word choice at ease
it me
The dys effectively means disorder of. Lexic reading and writing ability. It’s a disorder of reading.
In the same family you have some others. Dyscalcula is a disorder of maths ability. Dyspraxia is a disorder of motor control.
Science likes Latin based words. Because it’s a dead language, the meanings don’t change/drift. Most scientific language can be deconstructed this way.
Science might like latin words, but this one is greek. The dys- prefix means difficult, lexia means “ability with words”. Oh, and greek is not dead.
Literate.
Hyperlexia is a thing, kids with super-reading.