The counter-argument would be that the person could just use the pinyin or use a digital device to get them the characters. But as the article pointed out, those are both modern conveniences. Less than 100 years old…
All three PhD's were perfectly capable of communicating the word for sneeze and also recognize it in writting. They just couldn't write it exactly. I don't think it has a slowing effect. Except maybe by adding…
I think the shrimp meat example from the researcher daily notes was a bigger tell of the issue. Because shrimp meat is something I see written out EVERYWHERE.
The counter-argument would be that the person could just use the pinyin or use a digital device to get them the characters. But as the article pointed out, those are both modern conveniences. Less than 100 years old…
All three PhD's were perfectly capable of communicating the word for sneeze and also recognize it in writting. They just couldn't write it exactly. I don't think it has a slowing effect. Except maybe by adding…
I think the shrimp meat example from the researcher daily notes was a bigger tell of the issue. Because shrimp meat is something I see written out EVERYWHERE.