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15 Cards in this Set

  • Front
  • Back

American Sign Language

A manual language used by many people with hearingimpairments, considered being a full language, just as spoken English is.

Articulation

The movement of the mouth and tongue that shapes sound into speech.

Audition

Thought transformed into words and received by listener through hearing.

Cleft Palate

A congenital abnormality that occurs when the roof of the mouth has notjoined completely during prenatal development.

Communication

The exchange of thoughts, information, feelings, or ideas.

Communication Disorders

Impairments in articulation, fluency, voice, or language.

Dialect

A variant in pronunciation and syntax of a spoken language.

Dysponia

Brain dysfunction or disease that causes an inability to write, or to write legibly

Expressive Language

The ability to produce a message to send; typically involvesspeaking and writing.

Fluency

The flow of speech and difficulties with producing smooth speech.

Fluency Disorders

The flow of speech and difficulties with producing smooth speech.

Language

A code whereby ideas about the world are represented through aconventional system of arbitrary signals for communication.

Language Content

The meaning of words and sentences. Also called semantics.

Morphology

The rules that address how words are formed and their structure.

Voice

The introduction and quality of the production of words, such as pitch, loudness,and resonance.