dyslexia

English

Etymology

dys- + lexis + -ia. Via learned borrowing from New Latin dyslexia, produced from Latin dys- + lexis, -ia, a calque of German Dyslexie, coined by German ophthalmologist Rudolf Berlin in 1887, from Ancient Greek δυσ- (dus-) expressing the idea of difficulty, and λέξις (léxis, diction”, “word), the root chosen due to apparent semantic conflation of Greek λέγω (légō, to speak) and Latin legō (to read). Cf. the root of lexicon, Medieval Latin lexicon, Byzantine Greek λεξικόν (lexikón, dictionary, literally [book of] words).

Pronunciation

  • (US) enPR: dĭs-lĕkʹsē-ə, IPA(key): /dɪsˈlɛk.si.ə/
  • (file)

Noun

dyslexia (countable and uncountable, plural dyslexias)

  1. (neurology, pathology) A learning disability characterized by reading and writing difficulties.

Synonyms

Translations

See also

Further reading

Anagrams

Latin

Etymology

New Latin produced from dys- + lexis + -ia, a calque of German Dyslexie, coined by German ophthalmologist Rudolf Berlin in 1887, from Ancient Greek δυσ- (dus-) expressing the idea of difficulty, and λέξις (léxis, speech”; “diction”; “word).

Pronunciation

  • (Classical) IPA(key): /dysˈlek.si.a/, [d̪ʏs̠ˈɫ̪ɛks̠iä]
  • (Ecclesiastical) IPA(key): /disˈlek.si.a/, [d̪izˈlɛksiä]

Noun

dyslexia f (genitive dyslexiae); first declension (New Latin)

  1. dyslexia

Declension

First-declension noun.

Case Singular Plural
Nominative dyslexia dyslexiae
Genitive dyslexiae dyslexiārum
Dative dyslexiae dyslexiīs
Accusative dyslexiam dyslexiās
Ablative dyslexiā dyslexiīs
Vocative dyslexia dyslexiae

Descendants

  • English: dyslexia (learned)

Slovak

Noun

dyslexia f (genitive singular dyslexie, nominative plural dyslexie, genitive plural dyslexií)

  1. (neurology, pathology) dyslexia

References

  • dyslexia in Slovak dictionaries at slovnik.juls.savba.sk
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