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Short Stories: January 31, 2024 Issue [#12382]




 This week: Lethologica
  Edited by: Leger~ Author IconMail Icon
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Table of Contents

1. About this Newsletter
2. A Word from our Sponsor
3. Letter from the Editor
4. Editor's Picks
5. A Word from Writing.Com
6. Ask & Answer
7. Removal instructions

About This Newsletter

The purpose of this newsletter is to help the Writing.com short story author hone their craft and improve their skills. Along with that I would like to inform, advocate, and create new, fresh ideas for the short story author. Write to me if you have an idea you would like presented.

This week's Short Story Editor
Leger~ Author Icon



Word from our sponsor



Letter from the editor


Lethologica


It happens all the time! I'm trying to think of a word and it's there, just out of reach in my head. And not because I'm old, it happens to young people too.

*Questionbr* What is tip of the tongue phenomenon called? *Questionbr* 'The tip-of-the-tongue phenomenon or lethologica is "the inability to retrieve a specific word as a response to a visual, auditory, or tactile presentation."2 Even though the person will know the word they're trying to think of, it remains elusive and just outside of mental reach.'

The coinage of this term is popularly attributed to psychologist Carl Jung in the early 20th Century, but the earliest clear record is in the 1915 edition of Dorland's American Illustrated Medical Dictionary. Lethonomia is “the inability to recall the right name.”

And it happens to you: 'Tip-of-the-tongue states are believed to affect the average adult about once a week. While it's more common among older people, researchers note, that's not necessarily a bad thing or a warning sign of cognitive failure.' Researchers propose an important role is played by blocking words whose intrusions hinder access to the correct targets.

Now if the tip of your tongue tingles, it could be a sign of anxiety. You could have anomic aphasia. This goes by several other names, like anomia, amnesic aphasia, and anomic dysphasia. People with this language disorder often feel they have words on the tip of their tongue. They can still otherwise speak fluently and grammatically correctly. They may have particular trouble with nouns and verbs.

Let me throw a little more in here for you to ponder. Confabulation is a neuropsychiatric disorder wherein a patient generates a false memory without the intention of deceit. Déjà vu is especially common in people with certain neurological disorders such as epilepsy. In both cases, a compelling feeling of familiarity occurs, and we try to make sense of it by telling ourselves we must have seen or learned something before. Confabulation is more common than we realize.

What is the best way for a person to overcome the tip-of-the-tongue phenomenon?
*Questionbr*  Think about the length of the word or concept.
*Questionbr*  Stop trying to remember the information you want to retrieve.
*Questionbr*  Name the letters that start or end the word.
*Questionbr*  Think about words that may sound like the word you are trying to retrieve.

I hope this helps, and Write On!

This month's question: What little tricks do you use to remember something? Send in your answer below! *Down* Editors love feedback!


Editor's Picks

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Muscle Memory Open in new Window. (13+)
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#2253210 by NaNoNette Author IconMail Icon

Excerpt: “Your amnesia goes that far back?”

 
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Memory Alpha Open in new Window. (E)
A professor deals with memory loss.
#2136660 by Teargen Author IconMail Icon

Excerpt: It was no secret. Sigmund--so it was said with certainty from Milan to Minsk, from Harvard to Honolulu—would present a new and revolutionary conjecture on memory loss.

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The unreliability of memory.
#2312156 by essjk001 Author IconMail Icon

Excerpt: The bike was perfect. It was a blaring, bright blue with yellow trim and a little white basket.

Or maybe it was silver. Maybe it had a green basket.


 Memory Reconditioning Open in new Window. (E)
A culture that has forgotten its history an is unwilling to remember.
#2301884 by Chris24 Author IconMail Icon

Excerpt: “Interesting.” Lenses zoomed in, scanning every detail.

“You’ve found something?” Dr. Zed’s assistant commented from the other side of the lab.

“I’m not sure,” the old professor admitted. “It’s not like the other interfaces we’ve found at the site. This device seems to be a receiver of some sort.” Its constituent parts lay strewn across the table, each one precisely labeled. “Based on it’s primitive structure, I’d say this was some sort of apparatus for receiving radio waves.”

“Radio waves? Whatever for?”


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Tyres’ screech echoing off the tenements on either side, the car thumped to a halt. Beside Bridget, Liz murmured, “I hope she was strapped in.”

Bridget exhaled, leaning against the wall. “She?”

Liz glanced at the tablet. “Plate data shows the owner as Gabrielle Stoughton.”

Stoughton. The name was familiar, but the brewing headache worsened by Bridget’s furrowed brow impeded deeper thought. “Is she on the Protected List?”


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Ask & Answer


This month's question: What little tricks do you use to remember something? Send in your answer below! *Down* Editors love feedback!

Last month's "Short Stories Newsletter (January 3, 2024)Open in new Window. question: Do you find joy in finding just the right word to describe something?


dragonwoman Author Icon: Yes, I do. I don't search too far for it, but I try to leave ordinary words behind every so often to shock the reader.

Jay O'Toole Author Icon: I do look for the right word. It is a joy. Sometimes it comes more readily to my poetry than to my prose.

s Author Icon: The problem is, I tend to find the right word about two weeks after it's been published...

jackson Author Icon: Mostly, I find satisfaction; something akin to joy might come along now and then.

oldgreywolf on wheels Author Icon: Sometimes the "right" word is obscure to many people. As I'm not a grammarian, I'd rather use several reasonably common words to express myself than confuse the reader.

tj-turkey-jobble-jobble-hard-J Author Icon: No, I find a thesaurus to find just the right word. There is satisfaction, however.

Tannus Author Icon: Absolutely, Positively Yes!

Jtpete 1986 Author Icon: Most definitely. I will sometimes look for hours, stopping my whole process for just the right word, no concept, no expression, no term, no utterance, no-no-no - - I got it - Word! *BigSmile*

Incurable Romantic Author Icon: DEFINITELY. Every single time! *Smile*

Bonnie8910 Author Icon: It's always very satisfying, especially if you spent a while trying to find it.

HollisFrances Author Icon: yes!

elephantsealer Author Icon: Isn't it wonderful when one can find "just the right word" when writing? It makes life much more deliriously happy...

joemjackson Author Icon: Not really. Simple vocabulary.

TheBusmanPoet Author Icon: Yes.

SandraLynn Author Icon: I like the sound of the German word for snowflake, schneeflocke. If muttered with the right amount of frustration it sounds like a curse word. Apparently, the Inuit have several words for snow, too.

Moonstone Author Icon: All the time! It takes a really good amount of work and looking up synonyms to find it, but once you do it is an amazing feeling. And it's even better when that word was on the tip of your tongue, and you figure it out.

Bob Author Icon: I once purchased a thesaurus to help find synonyms and used it often to improve my word choices. Someone liked it better than I did and stole it. I miss my thesaurus.

Paul Author Icon: Bob Author Icon Get a new one, they’re cheap.

Then find who took the other one and make them eat it, page by page.

Bob Author Icon: Paul Author Icon - It was battery driven, but I like the idea.

Thodin Thorsson Author Icon: Yes, yes I do very much.

MissySu Author Icon: Yes

deemac Author Icon: It's all to do with what's around you. Why, over here in Ireland they say there's 20 words for 'green'! *Wink*

A great big thank you to everyone who responded! Leger~

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