For the stammerer there is a feeling of being out of control and an ensuing repetition of sounds, syllables, words or pauses. |
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On one painful occasion, however, I became the victim of an aggressive stammerer I sought to impress. |
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Let me tell you, for a stutterer, a stammerer, to be heard is a wonderful thing. |
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This is what it is like to be at the mercy of an affliction, to be defined as a stammerer by oneself and others and to feel it as the core of your identity. |
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For example, a person who utters words with an harmful aim in mind will experience difficulties to express himself during a future existence, even a stammerer or a mute. |
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The word Speech in The King's Speech means the speaking of George VI, the stammerer who did not want to become king. |
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Tories ridiculed stammerer Mr Balls as he mixed his words and began to stutter. |
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Not being a stammerer in one's speech, but being a stammerer of language itself. |
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You become a stammerer with a barely discernible stammer. |
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Consider Lewis Carroll, Edward Lear, and J. M. Barrie: the stammerer with the camera, the wandering epileptic, and the coughing frequenter of playgrounds. |
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Machado de Assis, born in 1839, of mixed race, epileptic, a stammerer, who, despite early poverty, mastered French and English, translated Shakespeare and poured out stories, novels and poetry. |
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This produces the effect of another person speaking in unison with the stammerer and in most cases will reduce the wearer's stammer significantly. |
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Wanting to avoid becoming a recluse and not speaking at all, which is what Jon explained can become of a stammerer, he decided to act upon it during his final year of studies. |
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Charles was the third and posthumous son of king Louis the Stammerer by his second wife Adelaide of Paris. |
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