Slurred speech, scrawled handwriting, textual typos -- all manifestations of uncoordinated communication. Analog things fail in analog ways, digital things in digital ways. Extending a phoneeeeme = analog failure. Swapping two lettres = digital failure.
Uncoordination basically means "doing something semantically near to the thing you intended to do." Hence why, when you're drunk, you may type "fiitabl;" instead of "football" -- the physical movements are nearly accurate, but keyboards have highly digital failure modes.
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(Funnily enough, if you asked me which letters are near 'c', I imagine 'x' and 'v' would come to mind as readily as 'b' and 'd'.)
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However, swapping, repeating, or omitting words are "semantically close" operations in any form of communication. Why? Because the failure is occurring at a more abstract level -- grammar -- instead of at the physical level of producing the communication.
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