How fast can u guess the words




















We were best friends. She always told me she loved my eyes. I didn't quite know why. I was in love with her, so of course my face lit up immensely whenever she said it.

She was beautiful, kind, and extremely funny. We'd be talking about nothing, and she'd turn to me and whisper, "I like your eyes. Suddenly, I got a phone call.

It was her mom. She was in a panic. I couldn't quite understand what she was saying. It sounded like, "Aaron, come quick! Kelsey, accident, Main Street! Come now! I saw Kelsey's mom helplessly crying, waiting for the ambulance to arrive. I saw a totaled car, blood everywhere. Then I saw her, Kelsey.

My heart stopped as I frantically ran over to her. I started crying. I know it isn't very manly, but I couldn't help it. Before I could say anymore, the medics took her away, the main source of blood coming from her head. I went to the hospital that night, I went every night. The doctors tried getting me to leave, but I refused. It was all my fault. If it wasn't for me, wanting to play basketball with her, she wouldn't be going through this. It was already four days, and she hasn't woken up. On the fifth day, I saw her eyes gently open.

She wasn't quite awake yet. Suddenly, doctors came rushing in, telling me I had to wait outside. Get Help Now! Ever heard of typoglycemia? Starting around , an email circulated through what seems like every inbox claiming that scrambled English words are just as easy to read as the original words. The rset can be a toatl mses and you can sitll raed it wouthit porbelm. Tihs is bcuseae the huamn mnid deos not raed ervey lteter by istlef, but the wrod as a wlohe.

Could you read it? Even with a mistake in this viral email rscheearch cannot spell researcher , the truth is pretty much every fluent English-speaker can read and understand it. The word-scrambling phenomenon has a punny name: typoglycemia , playing mischievously with typo and glycemia , the condition of having low blood sugar.

Typoglycemia is the ability to read a paragraph like the one above despite the jumbled words. Does it take you nanoseconds to solve the Word Jumble in the newspaper? Actually a lot else matters. The words need to be relatively short. Switching or transposing the letters makes a big difference. Letters beside each other in a word can be switched without much difficulty for the reader to understand. Take porbelm vs. We understand scrambled words better when their sounds are preserved: toatl vs.

Other factors play into it as well, like preserving double letters. Double letters are contextual markers that give good hints. However the codes can only be scrambled to a certain degree before we get lost. Try your hand at two hard-scrambled passages below which prove your brain needs more than just the first and last letters of a scrambled word to read it quickly.

The answers at the bottom; try not to cheat! The first example is from that blog post by Matt Davis.



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