Reading disorder is a recognized feature in Primary Progressive Aphasia (PPA). Surface dyslexia, characterized by regularization errors, is typically seen in the English-speaking semantic variant of PPA (svPPA). However, dyslexic characteristics of other languages, particularly logographical languages such as Chinese, remain sparse in the literature. This study aims to characterize and describe the dyslexic pattern in this group of patients by comparing the English-speaking svPPA group to the Chinese-speaking group. We hypothesize that Chinese-speaking individuals with svPPA will likely commit less surface dyslexic errors. By accessing the database of Singapore’s National Neuroscience Institute and National Alzheimer’s Coordinating Center of United States, we identified 3 Chinese- and 18 English-speaking svPPA patients for comparison respectively. The results suggest that instead of surface dyslexia, Chinese-speaking svPPA is characterized by a profound deep dyslexic error. Based on current evidence suggesting the role of temporal pole as semantic convergence center, we conclude that this region also mediates and converges lexical-semantic significance in logographical languages.