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18 Cards in this Set

  • Front
  • Back
• Immediacy behaviors:
Behaviors such as making eye contact, making appropriate gestures, and adjusting physical distance that enhance the quality of the relationship the quality of the relationship between speaker and listeners
• Volume:
The softness or loudness of a speaker’s voice
• Articulation:
The production of clear and distinct speech sounds
• Dialect:
A consistent style of pronouncing words that is common to an ethic group or geographic region
• Pronunciation:
The use of sounds to form words clearly and accurately
• Pitch:
How high or low your voice sounds
• Inflection:
The variation in the pitch of the voice
• Lavaliere microphone:
A microphone that can be clipped to an article of clothing or worn a cord around your neck
• Boom microphone:
A microphone that is suspended from a bar and moved to follow the speaker; often used in movies and TV.
Stationary microphone:
• A microphone attached to a lectern, sitting on a desk, or standing on a desk, or standing on the floor.
• Nonverbal communication:
Communication other than written or spoken language that creates meaning
• Nonverbal expectancy theory:
A communication theory that suggests that if listeners’ expectations about how communication should be expressed are violated, listeners will feel less favorable toward the communicator of the message
• Emotional contagion theory:
A theory suggesting that people tend to “cathch” the emotions of others
• Manuscript speaking:
Reading a speech from a written text
• Memorized speaking:
Delivering a speech word for word from memory without using notes.
• Impromptu speaking:
Delivering a speech without advance preparation
• Extemporaneous speaking:
Speaking form a written or memorized speech outline wording of the speech
• Immediacy:
The degree of perceived physical or psychological closeness between people