
Also known as xenoglossia, xenolalia
thumb|French parapsychologist [[Charles Richet coined the term xenoglossy in 1905.]]
thumb|French parapsychologist [[Charles Richet coined the term xenoglossy in 1905.]]
Xenoglossy (), also written xenoglossia () and sometimes also known as xenolalia, is the supposedly paranormal phenomenon in which a person is allegedly able to speak, write or understand a foreign language that they could not have acquired by natural means. The term derives from the Ancient Greek (), "foreigner" and (), "tongue" or "language". The term xenoglossy was first used by French parapsychologist Charles Richet in 1905. Accounts of xenoglossy are found in the New Testament, and contemporary claims have been made by parapsychologists and reincarnation researchers such as Ian Stevenson. Doubts have been expressed that xenoglossy is an actual phenomenon, and there is no scientifically admissible evidence supporting any of the alleged instances of xenoglossy.
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Discovered by embedding cosine similarity (sentence-transformers MiniLM, 384-dim).