Scanning speech and word history
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In the mid-1800s, Charcot used the term scandés in one of his lectures on diseases of the nervous system to describe a particular problem with speech frequently noted in patients with disseminated sclerosis:
“Une étude plus attentive fait reconnaître que les mots sont comme scandés: il y a une pause entre chaque syllabe, et celles-ci sont prononcées lentement.”1
George Sigerson's English translation published by the New Sydenham Society in 1877 runs as follows:
“A closer examination shows that the words are as if measured or scanned; there is a pause after every syllable, and …
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