For an antidote to the sugary Broadway show, I always wondered if at least one of the kids had a tin ear and the rhythm of a stutterer. |
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A college student of 19 was so severe a stutterer that his face during speech became grotesquely distorted. |
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He did well at local schools, even though he was a chronic stutterer till his late teens. |
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One question had been put to the stutterer who, predictably, had muffed it badly. |
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For one-time stutterer David Seidler, the screenwriter of The King's Speech, it was the night he finally found his voice. |
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In New Orleans, Mandisa started school and she had to cope with some new problems: she was big, a stutterer and an African American, and for those reasons, some kids teased her. |
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He was born a stutterer and was not able to dispute well, but he was good at writing papers. |
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One step in my method of correcting the stutterer is to build up a single-handedness or sidedness in the individual. |
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Along with the tongue twisters, Logue was known to draw on other time-honored elocutionary exercises, like having a stutterer shout vowel sounds out of an open window for long periods. |
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Shell, a comparative-literature professor and a stutterer, examines stuttering from the perspectives of history, literature, popular culture, science, and personal experience. |
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Just thinking about language can be enough to set off a chain of events in the brain of a stutterer that differs from that of someone who does not stutter, a new study reports. |
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Tillis relocated to Nashville in 1957, where he found the city's music industry executives bemused by the idea that a stutterer could be a recording artist, while his songwriting capability gained quick acceptance. |
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Take Stutterer, a film nominated in the live-action short category, which follows a London man with a speech disorder as he courageously takes a chance on love. |
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