I hvae no ieda waht you jsut siad. You sluhd lren how to use slpl cchk. You oblivousy do not hvae a gsarp of the Esilgnh lunggaae. To aewsnr yuor qoitseun, yes it deos sahwemot mettar waht oedrr the wdros are in. If the mexid wrod has seitiralimis to aehtonr wrod, it wlil mkae it dluciffit to raed. Aslo, elemertxy lnog wdros and eitoxc wdros are dluciffit to raed too.
¿Cdneherpmoe mi agimo?
2006-12-31 01:29:58
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answer #1
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answered by Kookiemon 6
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It may not matter to someone who has learned English as their first language, but I seriously doubt if other people will have an easy time understanding what you are trying to say.
Also, search engines won't decipher what you have written, it will go into the Internet as is, and essentially be unrecoverable by the rest of the world.
2006-12-31 01:38:59
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answer #2
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answered by djlachance 5
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in accordance to the study at Cambridge college, it is not important in what order the letters in a be conscious are. the only important subject is that the 1st and final letters be on the suitable place. something could be a entire mess and you will nevertheless study it without a topic. it is because of the fact the human ideas does not study each and every letter with the aid of itself, however the be conscious as an entire.
2016-11-25 02:40:54
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answer #3
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answered by Anonymous
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I tihnk it mtertas. I cloud not rcesinoe yuor question at first glance, meaning that some form of pre-conisation is required. If tahs the csae, the oredr does mttaer.
2006-12-31 01:08:03
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answer #4
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answered by Anonymous
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university of columbia did a study proving that the order of letters doesn't matter as long as you already new the word. The only two letter that need to be in place are the first and the last. the rest doesn't matter.
2006-12-31 01:12:26
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answer #5
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answered by ikeboywonder 2
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Just the first and last letter. Your brain automatically can decifer what a word is suppose to be by just looking at the first and last letter. This is good therapy for the dyslexic.
2006-12-31 01:06:06
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answer #6
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answered by Anonymous
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As long as the first and last letters are correct, what is written can be easily read...though the writer would never win a spelling bee.
2006-12-31 07:06:16
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answer #7
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answered by Anonymous
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The brain might read most words written this way... but you'll be sure to aggravate your readers! LOL
Lifes
2006-12-31 02:04:32
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answer #8
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answered by Anonymous
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No, I read questions like this all the time on here, fully able to read typonese.
2007-01-01 12:36:30
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answer #9
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answered by Bad 3
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Frist and lsat lteter.
2006-12-31 01:12:00
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answer #10
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answered by Shari 5
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