Used in a Sentence

dyspraxia

Definition, parts of speech, synonyms, and sentence examples for dyspraxia.

Editorial note

One of the symptoms is fine-motor dyspraxia -- which usually shows up as chronically bad handwriting (guilty!).

Examples16
Definitions1
Parts of speech1

Quick take

(neurology) A genetic neurological disorder where a person has motor skills severely below average due to their brain's inability to consistently send messages accurately to the body during the planning and execution of motor movements.

Meaning at a glance

The clearest senses and uses of dyspraxia gathered in one view.

noun

(neurology) A genetic neurological disorder where a person has motor skills severely below average due to their brain's inability to consistently send messages accurately to the body during the planning and execution of motor movements.

Definitions

Core meanings and parts of speech for dyspraxia.

noun

(neurology) A genetic neurological disorder where a person has motor skills severely below average due to their brain's inability to consistently send messages accurately to the body during the planning and execution of motor movements.

Example sentences

1

One of the symptoms is fine-motor dyspraxia -- which usually shows up as chronically bad handwriting (guilty!).

2

With dyspraxia, that I suspect I have, I think the difference is the same as software rendering vs having a GPU.

3

Sounds like dyspraxia, which usually means you have to break actions down into simpler actions and practice those simple actions a lot: sort of like learning a musical instrument.

4

This article made me wonder if dyspraxia was related to impaired or inhibited cerebellum function.

5

It's not required for diagnosis but anyone who tries neurofeedback or checking/confirming dyspraxia maybe as it relates to other nervous system issues.

6

The difficulties from dyspraxia are of very real consequence, regardless of social interpretation.

7

Many autistic people do struggle with driving and may have dyspraxia, which may require more lesson time, or not qualifying a driving test.

8

Individually oriented physical activities that emphasise co-ordination are good for dyspraxia e.g.

9

I'm also clumsy (dyspraxia como) so would end up spilling stuff everywhere, or dropping glasses.

10

On a related note: many autistic people suffer from forms of dyspraxia that make writing by hand physically unpleasant in addition to the ouput being hard to read.

11

I think this is a great framework to explain dyspraxia.

12

I had pretty serious brain damage when I was a child -- dyspraxia, dysgraphia, a bunch of other poorly-understood stuff -- and even today I'm still patchy.

Quote examples

1

If you’re a man, control your limbs, sir!” In our own kinder age, we might diagnose Anderson with dyspraxia.

2

(I don't know much about dyspraxia.) > He has an obsessive need for answers and will not accept "we don't know".

3

> time dyslexia AKA "time blindness", though I think "dyschronia" would be a better term, to match with dyslexia, dyscalculia, dyspraxia, and dysgraphia.

Proper noun examples

1

The rest (namely, these three) have an overlap in traits with Autism: - Developmental coordination disorder (Dyspraxia) - Obsessive-compulsive disorder - Chronic fatigue syndrome (Myalgic encephalomyelitis) Of those, fatigue in general is common with autistic people, as masking can result in it.

Frequently asked questions

Short answers drawn from the clearest meanings and examples for this word.

How do you use dyspraxia in a sentence?

One of the symptoms is fine-motor dyspraxia -- which usually shows up as chronically bad handwriting (guilty!).

What does dyspraxia mean?

(neurology) A genetic neurological disorder where a person has motor skills severely below average due to their brain's inability to consistently send messages accurately to the body during the planning and execution of motor movements.

What part of speech is dyspraxia?

dyspraxia is commonly used as noun.