Advertisement
Advertisement
alexia
[ uh-lek-see-uh ]
noun
, Pathology.
- a neurologic disorder marked by loss of the ability to understand written or printed language, usually resulting from a brain lesion or a congenital defect.
alexia
/ əˈlɛksɪə /
noun
- a disorder of the central nervous system characterized by impaired ability to read Nontechnical nameword blindness Compare aphasia
Discover More
Word History and Origins
Discover More
Word History and Origins
Origin of alexia1
C19: from New Latin, from a- 1+ Greek lexis speech; influenced in meaning by Latin legere to read
Discover More
Example Sentences
Another alexia expert, Pélagie Beeson of the University of Arizona, tells me that less than 6 percent of the patients she works with suffer from pure alexia.
From Washington Post
Destruction of the visual speech centre produces visual aphasia or alexia.
From Project Gutenberg
And in the higher reaches of mental function, the same antithesis comes out in the contrast of sensory and motor aphasia, alexia, sensory and motor types of memory and imagination, etc.
From Project Gutenberg
Pure alexia, which is Mum’s diagnosis, is much more rare: She can still write and touch-type, but bizarrely, she cannot read.
From Washington Post
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement
Browse