
A non-fluent aphasia characterised by effortful and halting speech, reduced phrase length, prosodic disturbance, and awkward articulation. Frequently shows dyspraxia of speech, long voice onset times, agrammatism, anomia (1), paraphasia, telegraphic speech, intrusive vowels, hesitations, consonant substitutions, repetition difficulties, and writing...
Found on
http://www.encyclo.co.uk/local/20437

<neurology> Motor aphasia due to a lesion of the motor speech centre (Broca's area) in the brain. ... (13 Nov 1997) ...
Found on
http://www.encyclo.co.uk/local/20973

A type of APHASIA characterised by loss of ability to produce but not to comprehend speech, associated with injury to Broca’s area in the front left hemisphere of the brain (left frontal lobe)
Found on
http://www.viviancook.uk/Linguistics/LinguisticsGlossary.htm

a type of aphasia caused by a lesion in Broca's area of the brain, characterized by misarticulated speech and lack of grammatical morphemes. Also called
Found on
https://www.infoplease.com/dictionary/brocas-aphasia
No exact match found.