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What exactly is echolia? Is it where the child compies what is said?

My son only says about 15 words, but he can sing almost every word

to his " Tigger Movie " soundtrack. Is this considered echolia? He

doesn't sing them after they are said, he sings with it at the same

time? Just wondering!

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echolalia: The pathological, parrotlike, and apparently senseless

repetition (echoing) of a word or phrase just spoken by another

person. echolalia Parrot-like repetition of overheard words or

fragments of speech.

That's the definition in the medical dictionary. My son goes

through spurts of echolalia. He actually has pretty good verbal

skills emerging but still reverts back to echoing what we say from

time to time. Right now, he's repeating the last word or two of

every sentence we say to him, but his speech therapist says it's not

a bad thing with all the progress he has made. He does echo things

he watches in his videos or that some of his electronic toys or

computer games say. He will oftentimes talk along with movies,

electronic games, electronic toys, etc., or sing along with songs,

not echoing them, so obviously he's memorized a lot of things, too.

As far as his talking along or singing along, his speech therapist

has not termed that echolalia.

The echolalia can be cute, precious and hiliarous at times to hear

him say some things that we say and put his own inflection into it,

and at other times it is the most annoying thing he can do at that

moment, so I just keep telling myself that this too will pass

eventually when he gets a little better command on his expressive

language skills (or at least I hope so!!

I hope I've been of some help.

Mom of Connor, 5-1/2

> What exactly is echolia? Is it where the child compies what is

said?

> My son only says about 15 words, but he can sing almost every word

> to his " Tigger Movie " soundtrack. Is this considered echolia? He

> doesn't sing them after they are said, he sings with it at the

same

> time? Just wondering!

Link to comment
Share on other sites

echolalia: The pathological, parrotlike, and apparently senseless

repetition (echoing) of a word or phrase just spoken by another

person. echolalia Parrot-like repetition of overheard words or

fragments of speech.

That's the definition in the medical dictionary. My son goes

through spurts of echolalia. He actually has pretty good verbal

skills emerging but still reverts back to echoing what we say from

time to time. Right now, he's repeating the last word or two of

every sentence we say to him, but his speech therapist says it's not

a bad thing with all the progress he has made. He does echo things

he watches in his videos or that some of his electronic toys or

computer games say. He will oftentimes talk along with movies,

electronic games, electronic toys, etc., or sing along with songs,

not echoing them, so obviously he's memorized a lot of things, too.

As far as his talking along or singing along, his speech therapist

has not termed that echolalia.

The echolalia can be cute, precious and hiliarous at times to hear

him say some things that we say and put his own inflection into it,

and at other times it is the most annoying thing he can do at that

moment, so I just keep telling myself that this too will pass

eventually when he gets a little better command on his expressive

language skills (or at least I hope so!!

I hope I've been of some help.

Mom of Connor, 5-1/2

> What exactly is echolia? Is it where the child compies what is

said?

> My son only says about 15 words, but he can sing almost every word

> to his " Tigger Movie " soundtrack. Is this considered echolia? He

> doesn't sing them after they are said, he sings with it at the

same

> time? Just wondering!

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Echolalia is when the person repeats what was either just said, or speaks in

" scripts " . When my son was verbal, that is mostly what he did. The singing of

a song may be " echolalic " in a way, although singing along is great! You'll

hear " spontaneous " speech referred to as the opposite of echolalia.

Echolia

What exactly is echolia? Is it where the child compies what is said?

My son only says about 15 words, but he can sing almost every word

to his " Tigger Movie " soundtrack. Is this considered echolia? He

doesn't sing them after they are said, he sings with it at the same

time? Just wondering!

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Echolalia is when the person repeats what was either just said, or speaks in

" scripts " . When my son was verbal, that is mostly what he did. The singing of

a song may be " echolalic " in a way, although singing along is great! You'll

hear " spontaneous " speech referred to as the opposite of echolalia.

Echolia

What exactly is echolia? Is it where the child compies what is said?

My son only says about 15 words, but he can sing almost every word

to his " Tigger Movie " soundtrack. Is this considered echolia? He

doesn't sing them after they are said, he sings with it at the same

time? Just wondering!

Link to comment
Share on other sites

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