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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. |
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Articulation |
The movement of the mouth and tongue that shapes sound into speech. |
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Audition |
Thought transformed into words and received by listener through hearing. |
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Cleft Palate |
A congenital abnormality that occurs when the roof of the mouth has notjoined completely during prenatal development. |
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Communication |
The exchange of thoughts, information, feelings, or ideas. |
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Communication Disorders |
Impairments in articulation, fluency, voice, or language. |
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Dialect |
A variant in pronunciation and syntax of a spoken language. |
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Dysponia |
Brain dysfunction or disease that causes an inability to write, or to write legibly |
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Expressive Language |
The ability to produce a message to send; typically involvesspeaking and writing. |
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Fluency |
The flow of speech and difficulties with producing smooth speech. |
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Fluency Disorders |
The flow of speech and difficulties with producing smooth speech. |
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Language |
A code whereby ideas about the world are represented through aconventional system of arbitrary signals for communication. |
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Language Content |
The meaning of words and sentences. Also called semantics. |
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Morphology |
The rules that address how words are formed and their structure. |
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Voice |
The introduction and quality of the production of words, such as pitch, loudness,and resonance. |