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Word-finding difficulty

Word-finding difficulty is trouble retrieving the right word, even though you know it. The person knows what they want to say, can picture the object, but the word stays "on the tip of the tongue" far more often than average.

You may notice:

  • hesitations in the middle of a sentence,
  • descriptions instead of the word ("the thing for opening the jar"),
  • frustration, sometimes avoiding speaking up,
  • perfect understanding of what is being said around them.

The word exists in the mind. It is just that accessing it takes a longer path.

Difficulty retrieving words, especially when speaking.

Possible accommodations

Visual supports, time to express oneself, rephrasing.

Explanations based on your profile

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Word-finding difficulty explained to a Child

0–12 years old

Dysnomia is when the word hides in your head.

Imagine you know an object really well, a fork, for example. You see it, you know what it's for, you know how to use it. But when it's time to say its name, it's as if the word were stuck somewhere in your head, and you have to search a long time to find it.

So the person might say: "Pass me the... the thing for eating" instead of saying "fork" right away.

It's not that they don't understand anything, and it's not that they aren't smart. It's just that the path to grabbing the word takes longer, like a door that opens more slowly. The word is there, we know it, but you have to be patient to get it back!

Help others understand

Living with the Word-finding difficulty: the context set, the conversation freed.

You write your profile just once. At every new school year, every new team, every new caregiver, you share the QR code, no need to start over from scratch. The conversation continues, it just begins from a different point.

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