dysnostalgia
A longing for the old days despite the bad things that happened especially the political scandals and other incidents.
dysnostalgia by Angriest Mouse of Schnaasberg June 4, 2017
Related Words
Dysnomlia
The inability to associate the name with the person at the very moment you need to tell someone who that person is.
See also: Dysmomlia.
See also: Dysmomlia.
Dysnauxia
An oft-unspoken disability whereby someone could hardly distinguish between the letter “O” and the number 0, often mistaking one for the other—the disorder was coined after the word “naught” for nothing, nil, or zero.
Dysnomia
Confusing particular names for one another, for example 'Sarah' for 'Lisa' and vice versa.
Similar to dyscalculia, wherein someone may believe that 5+6=10, dysnomia can strike at any time with the sufferer being nonetheless completely unaware. Most commonly dysnomia occurs when meeting another person for the first time and exchanging names as part of the initial greeting: "Hi, my name's Lisa..." and the conversation then continues and after ten minutes of talking the other person confidently bids them farewell, unintentionally substituting another name for the person's actual name, only to be corrected.
Dysnomia can cause offence and insult to the person whose name has been misremembered, and confusion and embarrassment to the person with difficulty remembering the names.
ORIGIN: coined in German from dys- ‘difficult’ + Latin nomen ‘name’.
Similar to dyscalculia, wherein someone may believe that 5+6=10, dysnomia can strike at any time with the sufferer being nonetheless completely unaware. Most commonly dysnomia occurs when meeting another person for the first time and exchanging names as part of the initial greeting: "Hi, my name's Lisa..." and the conversation then continues and after ten minutes of talking the other person confidently bids them farewell, unintentionally substituting another name for the person's actual name, only to be corrected.
Dysnomia can cause offence and insult to the person whose name has been misremembered, and confusion and embarrassment to the person with difficulty remembering the names.
ORIGIN: coined in German from dys- ‘difficult’ + Latin nomen ‘name’.
"Sorry Lisa, I often confuse the names Sarah and Lisa, it's my dysnomia... Oh, I meant sorry Sarah... You know what I mean."
Dysnomia by CunningLinguist_3.0 July 11, 2024
Dysnomia
Confusing particular names for one another, for example 'Sarah' for 'Lisa' and vice versa.
Similar to dyscalculia, wherein someone may believe that 5+6=10, dysnomia can strike at any time with the sufferer being nonetheless completely unaware. Most commonly dysnomia occurs when meeting another person for the first time and exchanging names as part of the initial greeting: "Hi, my name's Lisa..." and the conversation then continues and after ten minutes of talking the other person confidently bids them farewell, unintentionally substituting another name for the person's actual name, only to be corrected.
Dysnomia can cause offence and insult to the person whose name has been misremembered, and confusion and embarrassment to the person with difficulty remembering the names.
ORIGIN: coined in German from dys- ‘difficult’ + Latin nomen ‘name’.
Similar to dyscalculia, wherein someone may believe that 5+6=10, dysnomia can strike at any time with the sufferer being nonetheless completely unaware. Most commonly dysnomia occurs when meeting another person for the first time and exchanging names as part of the initial greeting: "Hi, my name's Lisa..." and the conversation then continues and after ten minutes of talking the other person confidently bids them farewell, unintentionally substituting another name for the person's actual name, only to be corrected.
Dysnomia can cause offence and insult to the person whose name has been misremembered, and confusion and embarrassment to the person with difficulty remembering the names.
ORIGIN: coined in German from dys- ‘difficult’ + Latin nomen ‘name’.
"Sorry Lisa, I often confuse the names Sarah and Lisa, it's my dysnomia... Oh, I meant sorry Sarah... You know what I mean."
Dysnomia by CunningLinguist_3.0 July 11, 2024