Recherche parmi différents professeurs en Anglais…
John
Linguistics
aphasia - Is health condition when somebody can't speak and heard because the man has a damage of a brain part which place in a left frontal lobe of brain?
- Is my statement true?
- Could you check mistakes in the statement?
21 déc. 2019 13:23
Réponses · 4
Artie delphi goo! Thank you for your checking! Have a nice day!
21 décembre 2019
I agree with Chris (below) as to the pathology. As to the grammar:
-"aphasia - Is health condition...": maybe "Aphasia is a health condition..." or "Aphasia: A health condition..."
-"...health condition when somebody...": better would be "a health condition *where* somebody..." or "a health condition *in which* somebody..."
-"...can't speak or heard...": use "hear" instead of "heard"
-"...because the man...": as you used "somebody", we often convert this to the pronoun "they". In older times they might convert "somebody" to "he", but this is used less now.
-"...has a damage of a brain part which place in a left frontal lobe of brain...": this needs a lot of work. I would say "...has damaged the left frontal lobe of the brain." I have turned "damage" into a verb, but you can say "...has damage in the left frontal lobe..." or "...some damage..." Damage is a collective noun, and doesn't take an indefinite article "a". Since you are saying "left frontal lobe", which is a part of the brain, you don't need to say "part". If you are referring to a specific place inside the left frontal lobe, you can say "...part of the left frontal lobe of the brain."
-"...which place in...": you might mean, "which is located in".
-"...of brain.": we would say "of *the* brain". Usually, when we talk about organs of the body in general, we use a definite article.
21 décembre 2019
Thank you a lot for your comment! Regards!
21 décembre 2019
Aphasia is a neurological condition which interferes with the ability to process words (listening comprehension, reading comprehension, written expression, verbal expression).
21 décembre 2019
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John
Compétences linguistiques
Anglais, Russe
Langue étudiée
Anglais
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