"Rare condition means I can taste words - my boyfriend's name is like paper"

  • last month
A woman can "taste words" due to a neurological condition - and says her boyfriend's name tastes like "paper".

Sarah Gann, 30, grew up associating words with certain tastes - but assumed everyone else did too.

It turned out she has synesthesia, a neurological condition where the stimulation of one sense - in Sarah's case, sound leads to the stimulation of another - taste.

The mum-of-two doesn't associate a taste with every single word, but does taste lots of common ones.

Sarah says the word 'teacher' tastes like purple tropical Skittles, and the word 'think' tastes like chocolate milk.

'Church' tastes like powdered donuts and 'ball' tastes like nacho cheese.

Her own name doesn't have a flavour, but her partner Jakob Clayton, 27, tastes like paper, she says.

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