This is practice sentence to you how my brain. I wonder how noticeable differences are to to other people.
That first sentence looks very bad to me; the second is grammatically correct but feels like it’s missing an article. If that’s not harder for you to understand than for other people, I still think there’s a good chance that it could be harder for other dyslexic people to understand (compared to correct text), because I would not expect that the glitches in two different brains with dyslexia are the same in every detail (that said, I don’t really understand what dyslexia means, though my dad and brother say they have dyslexia.)
the same word … foruthwly and fortunly and forrtunaly
You appear to be identifying the word by its beginning and end only, as if it were visually memorized. Were you trained in phonics/phonetics as a child? (I’m confused why anyone ever thought that whole-word memorization was good, but it is popular in some places.) This particular word does have a stranger-than-usual relationship between spelling and pronunciation, though.
> I can do that too. Thankfully. Unless I don’t recognize the sounds.
My buffer seems shorter on unfamiliar sounds. Maybe one second.
> reading out loud got a little obstructive. I started subvocalizing, and that was definitely less fun.
I always read with an “auditory” voice in my head, and I often move my tongue and voicebox to match the voice (especially if I give color to that voice, e.g. if I make it sound like Donald Trump). I can’t can’t speed-read but if I read fast enough, the “audio” tends to skip and garble some words, but I still mostly detect the meanings of the sentences. My ability to read fast was acquired slowly through much practice, though. I presume that the “subvocalization” I do is an output from my brain rather than necessary for communication within it. However, some people have noticed that sometimes, after I say something, or when I’m processing what someone has told me, I visibly subvocalize the same phrase again. It’s unclear whether this is just a weird habit, or whether it helps me process the meaning of the phrase. (the thing where I repeat my own words to myself seems redundant, as I can detect flaws in my own speech the first time without repetition.)
That first sentence looks very bad to me; the second is grammatically correct but feels like it’s missing an article. If that’s not harder for you to understand than for other people, I still think there’s a good chance that it could be harder for other dyslexic people to understand (compared to correct text), because I would not expect that the glitches in two different brains with dyslexia are the same in every detail (that said, I don’t really understand what dyslexia means, though my dad and brother say they have dyslexia.)
You appear to be identifying the word by its beginning and end only, as if it were visually memorized. Were you trained in phonics/phonetics as a child? (I’m confused why anyone ever thought that whole-word memorization was good, but it is popular in some places.) This particular word does have a stranger-than-usual relationship between spelling and pronunciation, though.
> I can do that too. Thankfully. Unless I don’t recognize the sounds.
My buffer seems shorter on unfamiliar sounds. Maybe one second.
> reading out loud got a little obstructive. I started subvocalizing, and that was definitely less fun.
I always read with an “auditory” voice in my head, and I often move my tongue and voicebox to match the voice (especially if I give color to that voice, e.g. if I make it sound like Donald Trump). I can’t can’t speed-read but if I read fast enough, the “audio” tends to skip and garble some words, but I still mostly detect the meanings of the sentences. My ability to read fast was acquired slowly through much practice, though. I presume that the “subvocalization” I do is an output from my brain rather than necessary for communication within it. However, some people have noticed that sometimes, after I say something, or when I’m processing what someone has told me, I visibly subvocalize the same phrase again. It’s unclear whether this is just a weird habit, or whether it helps me process the meaning of the phrase. (the thing where I repeat my own words to myself seems redundant, as I can detect flaws in my own speech the first time without repetition.)