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WerewolfPoet
Deinonychus
Deinonychus


Joined: Mar 04, 2012
Posts: 361

PostPosted: Wed Apr 04, 2012 11:28 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

Spell-check on the computer has actually impaired my ability to spell; I have become so accustomed to having the computer fix all of my spelling errors that my fingers fell content to slam down any combination of letters, knowing that the computer will correct it with just a click of a mouse.
Despite this, I still appear to have a stronger spelling ability than that of my peers.
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littlelily613
Phoenix
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Joined: Feb 12, 2011
Age: 29
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PostPosted: Thu Apr 05, 2012 12:37 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

I don't think difficulty in spelling is an autistic trait. It might be a comorbid learning disability for some, but it is not directly autistic. I have autism, with no learning disability as far as I know, and despite the occasional typo you might find in my posts (or my laziness and lack of proofreading), I actually have excellent spelling and grammar.
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TechnoDog
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Joined: Feb 17, 2012
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Location: Thornaby, UK

PostPosted: Thu Apr 05, 2012 3:00 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

Quote:
As dialects of the English language vary significantly, it would be difficult to create a phonemic orthography that encompassed all of them. However, it is fairly easy to create one based on a standard accent such as Received Pronunciation. This would, however, exclude certain sound differences found in other accents, such as the bad–lad split in Australian English. With time, pronunciations change and spellings become out of date, as has happened to English and French. In order to maintain a phonemic orthography such a system would need periodic updating, as has been attempted by various language regulators and proposed by other spelling reformers.


Why you think Americans spell "colour" "color".
"centre" "center".

etc:-

http://www3.telus.net/linguisticsissues/BritishCanadianAmerican.htm
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ValentineWiggin
Yup.
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Joined: May 16, 2011
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PostPosted: Thu Apr 05, 2012 5:40 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

IdahoRose wrote:
I've never had trouble with spelling. I beat my elementary school in a spelling contest but choked up during the following contest involving other schools.

I think my ability to spell comes from the amount of books I read as a child (which was a lot).


I went all the way to the state spelling bee in the capitol, representing my district, when I was in 5th grade.
Was a big deal for a small town girl, wherein I had one of those movie-like starry-eyed moments in the big city, seeing how far my smarts could take me...

I lost out on "impale" because the reader, like so many other Southernese people,
had a speech impediment involving hard vowels, so she pronounced it "impel".

I still can't hear/read either word, or think about the event in general without stimming.
I wanted another trophy, damnit.

I have to remind myself not to become irritated with people who are poor spellers, though my mother and I often send pictures to one another of misspelled signs outside businesses in commiseration about what we see as the disturbing lack of education in the world- some of these are outside schools, even. Still. I try to remind myself of my father, possibly the smartest person I know, and one who can't spell worth a darn.
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skenasis
Pileated woodpecker
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Joined: Aug 12, 2011
Age: 24
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PostPosted: Thu Apr 05, 2012 8:08 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

I have no trouble with spelling or grammar. I've always been good with them, even from a young age. I think it's all the reading I do.
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ValentineWiggin
Yup.
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Joined: May 16, 2011
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PostPosted: Thu Apr 05, 2012 11:13 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

Taking a break from a research paper on women with Autism, and thought I'd duck in to share this:

"Baron-Cohen says that he believes that autistic girls are strong systemizers. That quality may manifest itself in letters rather than numbers."

"Contrary to the Asperger’s stereotype, Caitlyn struggles in math but tests in the highly gifted range in reading and writing. This is another sex difference that Lord sees among her patients. 'I don’t have any real data, but a lot of high-functioning girls are real readers — not great on subtleties, but they like fantasies and the ‘Baby-Sitters’ series,' she says. 'The boys are much less so.'"

"With her high aptitude for reading and writing and her difficulties with math, Caitlyn fits Skuse’s model. Even as she was failing school last year, she kept up her fan fiction, posting stories she had written on the Web site Gaia Online. On the 40-mile drive home from camp, she told me about her plan to write an original eight-book fantasy series about a werewolf, to be called 'Midnight Wind.'"

NYT: What Autistic Girls Are Made Of

It's five years old, and not about reading/spelling in particular, but it's long, and I thought it very interesting.
I've never found it before today- might post it in the women's section.
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They talk and vote as they are directed by Some Man of Property, who has attached their Minds
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lostgirl1986
There's a party in my head.
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Joined: Feb 29, 2012
Age: 26
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Location: Ontario, Canada

PostPosted: Thu Apr 05, 2012 1:07 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

No, that's one thing that I'm good at doing. I've always been good at spelling different words. Language Arts was always one of my greatest strengths. It's math that I'm not good at.
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nebrets
Velociraptor
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PostPosted: Mon Apr 09, 2012 4:45 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

Shatbat wrote:
Reading a lot goes a very long way in writing words properly.


Reading does not necessarily make spelling easier.

I read incessantly (always have) but trying to put the letters together in the correct combination is frustrating. This mystified my elementary teachers who could not make me put a book down (as reading was and still is one of my special interests). I can read a word 1000 times, but I cannot "see" it written. I do not know if this is because I see things in pictures, so that the written word is automatically put into a photograph of the meaning rather than a photograph of the page with the writing. The frustrating part of school was if I asked how to spell a word, I was told to look it up in a dictionary, but I could not find it in a dictionary because I did not know what order the letters were in, or what letters were in the word.

On the other hand, I won several contests in math and science. I have a very high intelligence and have taken more than a few graduate science courses because they are fun, but I cannot spell. It just depends on if something falls in my interest range. The irony is that spelling was the only subject I had to study in elementary school, and the lack of spelling test in junior high and up gave me great joy.
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Annmaria
Phoenix
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Age: 42
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Location: Ireland

PostPosted: Mon Apr 09, 2012 5:47 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

Just want to point out that I am very good at spelling always was even at school, its just certain words that catch me all the time. When reading offical letters, posts on here, newspapers etc a spelling mistake will stand out to me so clear I will always pick up on it. If I make a spelling mistake I will have to change it I could not send a post with one in it, if I do I will go back and edit it.
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Max000
Toucan
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Joined: Apr 07, 2012
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PostPosted: Mon Apr 09, 2012 11:48 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

Annmaria wrote:
Just want to point out that I am very good at spelling always was even at school, its just certain words that catch me all the time. When reading offical letters, posts on here, newspapers etc a spelling mistake will stand out to me so clear I will always pick up on it. If I make a spelling mistake I will have to change it I could not send a post with one in it, if I do I will go back and edit it.


Keep a list of all the words you commonly misspell (your spelling and the correct spelling). Study the list and look for similar spelling errors, across multiple words. When you find those, study those words together in a group. You should be able to find and correct all of your spelling errors that way. It might take a bit of time, but its doable.
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Annmaria
Phoenix
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Age: 42
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Location: Ireland

PostPosted: Tue Apr 10, 2012 4:38 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

Thanks for advice Max000 will have a go! Smile
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Australien
Deinonychus
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Joined: May 18, 2011
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PostPosted: Tue Apr 10, 2012 6:34 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

I've always been very adept at spelling, and my VCI was by far (12-24 point margin) my highest WAIS subscore. These two things are probably related.
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Looneytunes
Snowy Owl
Snowy Owl


Joined: Feb 22, 2012
Posts: 162

PostPosted: Tue Apr 10, 2012 9:21 am    Post subject: Re: Spelling Reply with quote

Annmaria wrote:
Is this an autistic problem or something else, a word like psychiatrist etc even though I might write it a million times a still can't spell it thank god for the internet. That's not the only word either anyone else with this problem I am not dyslectic even I had to look how to spell that its not a word that would be familiar with? I know dyslexia again I needed spell check is to do with seeing letters the same I do know the difference between B & D etc but constantly forget how to spell.


Somewhere between what I am thinking and what I want to say, the words gets lost and I misspell certain words. The bad thing is Outlook Express does not include spell check and it makes me look stupid to misspell certain words. If the site includes spell check I am ok, but if it doesn't - I have to go back one or two times until I get it right. Its frustrating.
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Max000
Toucan
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Joined: Apr 07, 2012
Age: 52
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PostPosted: Tue Apr 10, 2012 4:59 pm    Post subject: Re: Spelling Reply with quote

Looneytunes wrote:
Annmaria wrote:
Is this an autistic problem or something else, a word like psychiatrist etc even though I might write it a million times a still can't spell it thank god for the internet. That's not the only word either anyone else with this problem I am not dyslectic even I had to look how to spell that its not a word that would be familiar with? I know dyslexia again I needed spell check is to do with seeing letters the same I do know the difference between B & D etc but constantly forget how to spell.


Somewhere between what I am thinking and what I want to say, the words gets lost and I misspell certain words. The bad thing is Outlook Express does not include spell check and it makes me look stupid to misspell certain words. If the site includes spell check I am ok, but if it doesn't - I have to go back one or two times until I get it right. Its frustrating.


Do you have a word processing program that has a spell check? If so, just copy and past your text three. Correct the spelling and copy and past it back to where you need it. If you don't have a text editor, then use an online spell check like this one, and do the same thing.

Add your own text and check the spelling

Also Google is a great spell check. If you are typing something and are not sure all the words are spelled correctly, simply copy the entire sentence and past it into a Google search bar. Google will give you "Showing results for..." with the corrected spelling.
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mrspotatohead
Snowy Owl
Snowy Owl


Joined: Apr 05, 2012
Posts: 160

PostPosted: Tue Apr 10, 2012 9:56 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

I like languages like Romanian and Spanish that have phonetic spelling systems. They don't have spelling bees after maybe kindergarten because most sounds are represented by just one symbol (except in the case of the c in words like "cu" versus in "ce", but there is a reliable rule in place that, if a c comes before e or i, it is pronounced like "ch" in English--and, unlike in the case of English phonetic "rules", there are not exceptions to the Romanian phonetic spelling rules).

Its fʌn tu rayt In ay pi ey fənEɾIks, tu.
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