often make grammatical mistakes when speaking?
HiccupHaddock
Yellow-bellied Woodpecker
Joined: 11 Mar 2022
Age: 46
Gender: Female
Posts: 68
Location: UK
Dear all,
I'm wondering does anyone else find that they often make grammatical mistakes, or the order of words in a sentence comes out wrong, when speaking?
I find this happens when I'm speaking, even when I know the concept I want to get across, and even if I am speaking relatively slowly.
It's quite strange, as I have a good understanding of grammar and don't make those kinds of mistakes when writing.
Is it some kind of speech dyslexia (or is there a better name)?
I'm wondering is it a common aspect of autism?
Is English your second language? People whose first language is not English tend to be like that. They can have a very good understanding of English grammar. When they write, they have enough time to write correctly. However, when speaking, they sometimes can't intuitively/naturally come up with a sentence with correct grammar quickly enough.
If English is your first language/mother tongue, the same may still apply if you don't have this skill of "intuitively/naturally/spontaneously" constructing a correct sentence quickly. I suspect that it could be due to one of the autism-related problems? Maybe? Maybe similar to difficulty in naturally learning body language, resulting in odd body language?
Just my thoughts.
yes, this is common in autism and is part of sensory processing struggles. Seeing a speech language pathologist for diagnosis of the specific struggle and therapy can sometimes help!
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https://oldladywithautism.blog/
"Curiosity is one of the permanent and certain characteristics of a vigorous intellect.” Samuel Johnson
It does in cases with autism.
From working memory issues usually related to sensory issues, to uneven cognitive profiles that don't favor verbal abilities, to straight up aphasia.
It happens to me more often whenever I speak with my native language than with English despite using it more often and on a daily basis.
Didn't helped that I don't particularly have an aptitude for linguistic abilities -- it's the opposite even.
And it's always unnatural no matter how much "practice" I have.
Patterns within patterns within patterns -- not a natural exercise of verbal thought, but more like a manual translation of sorts in every time I read, hear, speak, write... Just every time words are involved.
And I have no choice.
And sometimes it hurts like how overstimulation hurts.
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I find this happens when I'm speaking, even when I know the concept I want to get across, and even if I am speaking relatively slowly.
It's quite strange, as I have a good understanding of grammar and don't make those kinds of mistakes when writing.
That sounds like my situation.
I don't have the info to address that but can say I have apparently been autistic all my life yet the word order thing when speaking seemed to appear with the onset of fibromyalgia and ME/CFS and is becoming more frequent as time goes on & gets really frequent during a ME/CFS flare.
But even then I do fine at word order when writing.
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"There are a thousand things that can happen when you go light a rocket engine, and only one of them is good."
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If I'm speaking to someone I'm familiar with and there's no stress, I seem to be about as well or even better than typing. If I'm speaking to someone I'm unfamiliar with and there's stress for whatever reason (routine disruption being a big one), I will pause, exchange words entirely, stutter, blabber on and so on.
I have remnants of language disorders still that will manifest in the latter situation. Expressive mostly. Sometimes if I'm really overwhelmed, I'll often misinterpret language when it comes to receptive too.
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