was on the tip of his tongue - traducción al italiano
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was on the tip of his tongue - traducción al italiano

PHENOMENON OF FAILING TO RETRIEVE A WORD FROM MEMORY, COMBINED WITH PARTIAL RECALL AND THE FEELING THAT RETRIEVAL IS IMMINENT
Tip-Of-The-Tongue Effect; Tip-of-the-tongue; Tip-of-the-tongue phenomenon; Tip of the tongue phenomenon; Lethologica; Tip of tongue; Feeling of knowing
  • The [[anterior cingulate cortex]] shows increased activation in TOT states
  • [[William James]] was the first psychologist to describe the tip of the tongue phenomenon, although he did not label it as such

was on the tip of his tongue      
Ce l"aveva sulla punta della lingua
tip of the iceberg         
WIKIMEDIA DISAMBIGUATION PAGE
Tip of the iceberg (disambiguation); Tip of the Iceberg
la punta dell"iceberg
on the run         
WIKIMEDIA DISAMBIGUATION PAGE
On the run; On the Run (song); On the Run (disambiguation); On The Run; On The Run Tour; On the Run (album); On the runs; On the Runs; On the Run Tour; On the Run (film)
in fuga; indaffarato, attivo; di corsa, correndo

Definición

tongue
(tongues)
1.
Your tongue is the soft movable part inside your mouth which you use for tasting, eating, and speaking.
I walked over to the mirror and stuck my tongue out...
She ran her tongue around her lips.
N-COUNT: usu poss N
2.
You can use tongue to refer to the kind of things that a person says.
She had a nasty tongue, but I liked her.
N-COUNT: usu supp N
3.
A tongue is a language. (LITERARY)
The French feel passionately about their native tongue.
= language
N-COUNT
see also mother tongue
4.
Tongue is the cooked tongue of an ox or sheep. It is usually eaten cold.
N-VAR
5.
The tongue of a shoe or boot is the piece of leather which is underneath the laces.
N-COUNT
6.
A tongue of something such as fire or land is a long thin piece of it. (LITERARY)
A yellow tongue of flame shot upwards.
N-COUNT: N of n
7.
A tongue-in-cheek remark or attitude is not serious, although it may seem to be.
...a lighthearted, tongue-in-cheek approach...
PHRASE: PHR n, v-link PHR, PHR after v
8.
If you hold your tongue, you do not say anything even though you might want to or be expected to, because it is the wrong time to say it.
Douglas held his tongue, preferring not to speak out on a politically sensitive issue.
PHRASE: V inflects
9.
If you describe something you said as a slip of the tongue, you mean that you said it by mistake.
At one stage he referred to Anna as John's fiancee, but later said that was a slip of the tongue.
PHRASE: slip inflects
10.
to bite your tongue: see bite

Wikipedia

Tip of the tongue

Tip of the tongue (also known as lethologica) is the phenomenon of failing to retrieve a word or term from memory, combined with partial recall and the feeling that retrieval is imminent. The phenomenon's name comes from the saying, "It's on the tip of my tongue." The tip of the tongue phenomenon reveals that lexical access occurs in stages.

People experiencing the tip-of-the-tongue phenomenon can often recall one or more features of the target word, such as the first letter, its syllabic stress, and words similar in sound, meaning, or both sound and meaning. Individuals report a feeling of being seized by the state, feeling something like mild anguish while searching for the word, and a sense of relief when the word is found. While many aspects of the tip-of-the-tongue state remain unclear, there are two major competing explanations for its occurrence: the direct-access view and the inferential view. Emotion and the strength of the emotional ties to what is trying to be remembered can also have an impact on the TOT phenomenon. The stronger the emotional ties, the longer it takes to retrieve the item from memory.

TOT states should be distinguished from FOK (feeling of knowing) states. FOK, in contrast, is the feeling that one will be able to recognize⁠—from a list of items⁠—an item that is currently inaccessible. There are still currently opposing hypotheses in the psychological literature regarding the separability of the process underlying these concepts. However, there is some evidence that TOTs and FOKs draw on different parts of the brain. TOTs are associated with the anterior cingulate, right dorsolateral prefrontal cortex, and right inferior cortex while FOKs are not. FOKs can be assessed through memory-monitoring testing in which a test subject is asked to "estimate the likelihood" of recognizing when "prompted with a cue" or information that they previously failed to remember. This test aims to measure a test subject's accuracy of memory monitoring during the "memory extraction stage".

An occasional tip-of-the-tongue state is normal for people of all ages; however, it becomes more frequent as people age. TOT can be referred as an actual medical condition, but only when it becomes frequent enough to interfere with learning or daily life. This disorder is called anomic aphasia when acquired by brain damage, usually from a head injury, stroke, or dementia.

The tip of the tongue phenomenon has implications for research in psycholinguistics, memory, and metacognition.