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fyi-
Aorncidcg to an Egslinh posfsfeor, it ulasuly denso't mtetar wrehe you
pacle the ltrets in a wrod, as lnog as the frsit and lsat ltrets are
psoioetnid ctrorlcy, bcuesae the hmuan biran rdaes the wrod as a wlhoe
ietnsad of ecah ltetr aolne...
Jsut tgohuht yuo mhigt fnid it itrsnetnieg.
Of csuore if you are desyxilc, you mgiht not eevn ncotie.
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Hi Daisy,
That's amazing! I started to read your post and it was tough for the first couple of words....then kerchunck. The brain kicked in and I could read it almost as readily as what I normally type.
Hmmm....maybe that's a reflection on my typing more than on my reading :> )
Sooo, I got my wife to come down and read it. The same thing. She stumbled over the first few words and then read the rest correctly.
I guess it not my lousy typing after all!
Regards
Dennis
[This message has been edited by BWrangler (edited September 14, 2003).]
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yes, in a real time chat, if you're close the brain picks it up correctly. Problems are always with punctuation and our inablity to see the speaker and know their gests.
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And the biggest clue to the word is the context of the sentence. I can often understand someone with a very strong accent when I know the context of what we are discussing, but if they call me up and say a sentence cold, with no context, I can't make out a single word of it.
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I have actually known this fact for several years. Since my wife is Russian, watching her change words from the Russian cyrillic alphabet to the Latin [english] alphabet has given me plenty of practice!!! Her spelling may not always be correct but I understand what's been written.
And my mother-in-law has given me several wonderful Russian beekeeping books, but my reading of Russian cyrillic makes for very slow going...
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