
It didn't help that his last name was Drakunovski which he had a very difficult time saying, which was part of the reason he started using Dragon instead. When he was young, Richard Dragon had a speech impediment that contributed to the high level of bullying he was victim to.Her mother is supportive of the stand-up comedy class in part because she thinks it'll be good for her daughter to gain confidence.
Killing and Dying: Jesse has a stutter.In The Filth, "poor autistic" Le Pen is revealed to have a lisp, which is why she usually only communicates via her giant pens.
Depending on the Writer, Cloak of Cloak and Dagger sometimes has a stutter when he's forced to revert to being Tyrone Johnson. Batman villain Ventriloquist has a unique one when speaking through the puppet Scarface where he replaces his "B"s with "G"s, leading to Scarface defiantly calling Batman and Robin "Gatman and Rogin". For whatever reason, Sweden in Hetalia: Axis Powers can't pronounce his vowels. Potpourri of Heart Catch Pretty Cure has a lisp, most likely because he's a young fairy, leading him to call his partner Itsuki "Itshuki" and his Verbal Tic "-desu" "-deshu". Mikuru is also described as having a slight lisp in the original novels and the Japanese script for the anime, but it's not carried over into the English dub of the series. Fans also speculate that this is where her " Nyoron~" comes from. Tsuruya's Cute Little Fang gives her a small impediment that causes her to occasionally mispronounce words. has been deaf since birth and speaks in a noticeably clipped and awkward manner, including AcCENT Upon the Wrong SylLABle to the point that even the original Japanese subtitles his speech, which is why he usually prefers to communicate via Sign Language. Crosses a little bit into Fang Thpeak as the source of Nel's lisp seems to be her broken ◊ teeth. Neliel Tu Odelschwanck of Bleach has a rather pronounced lisp in the Japanese anime and manga, causing cute mispronunciations of some words and the main character's name (Isygo). It takes her a long time ( at least two panels' of Visible Silence) to make up a sentence from content words, causing her to grunt during her rather lengthy word-finding before (if given the chance, which fortunately is the case in Present Day) she makes out a completely fluent sentence. Are All She Says is titled after the protagonist Toda's unusual case of this, as her problem is the speed she processes language.