dys-

(Greek: bad, harsh, wrong; ill; hard to do, difficult at; slow of; disordered; impaired, defective)

dysgenics
The science dealing with the factors operating to produce biological, and especially genetic, deterioration in the offspring of animals.
dysgenitalism
A condition caused by abnormal genital development.
dysgeogenous
Plants growing on soils; such as, granite, or hard rocks, generally; which do not readily yield a detritus.
dysgeusia (dis GYOO see uh)
Impairment or perversion of the sense of taste; impairment or perversion of the gustatory sense so that normal tastes are interpreted as being unpleasant or completely different from the characteristic taste of a particular food or chemical compound.
dysglandular
Of or relating to the dysfunction of glands, especially the endocrine glands.
dysgnathia
Abnormality of the jaw; any developmental abnormality of the maxilla (upper), or mandible (lower), or both jaws.
dysgnathic
dysgnosia
Any disorder characterized by intellectual impairment; memory loss; any mental illness.
dysgonesis
dysgrammataxia
Difficulty in combining into an integrated whole the various symbols comprising a word or phrase.
dysgrammatical
Pertaining to faults of speech arising from a disease.
dysgrammatism
A speech defect involving incorrect phrase construction, leading to infantile speech or a telegraphic style; an aphasic disorder that impairs syntax rather than vocabulary; also agrammatism.
dysgraphia
1. The inability to write coherently (as a manifestation of brain damage).
2. Writer's cramp.
3. In children, difficulty in learning to write.
dysgraphic
dyshepatia
Disordered liver function.

Inter-related cross references, directly or indirectly, involving word units meaning "bad, wrong": caco-, kako-; mal-; mis-; pessim-; sceler-.

Cross references directly, or indirectly, involving "slow, slowness, slow of, sluggish": lent-; tard-.