Surface dyslexia is a form of acquired dyslexia which is characterized by difficulty in reading irregular words. An individual with surface dyslexia may find it difficult to read "pint" aloud, and this may lead to different responses from the patient.Here's a brief explanation of what a patient with surface dyslexia would do when presented with the word "pint" to read aloud:Option (a) "pronounce it correctly as "pine" + "t"" is wrong. Patients with surface dyslexia would have difficulty in pronouncing "pint" correctly.Option (b) "find it easier to read than a nonword like vib" is also wrong. Patients with surface dyslexia would find it easier to read a non-word than a word such as "pint".Option (c) "be able to read it correctly because they rely exclusively on the lexical route" is also wrong. Patients with surface dyslexia are unable to use the lexical route to read words, so they would have difficulty reading the word "pint" correctly.Option (d) "all of the options" is also wrong. So far, we have not found any correct option in this list.Option (e) "read it aloud to rhyme with "mint"" is correct. A patient with surface dyslexia might read "pint" aloud to rhyme with "mint".The correct answer is (e) "read it aloud to rhyme with "mint"".