Human Communication Disorders: An IntroductionGeorge H. Shames, Elisabeth H. Wiig |
From inside the book
Results 1-3 of 55
Page 30
... vowels of English . The major elements in traditional vowel descriptions are tongue position — its height and front ... vowels is described in terms of relative closure or rounding . In the rounded or somewhat closed position , the lips ...
... vowels of English . The major elements in traditional vowel descriptions are tongue position — its height and front ... vowels is described in terms of relative closure or rounding . In the rounded or somewhat closed position , the lips ...
Page 31
... Vowels . The range of articulation is shown as a solid line ; high back and front tongue shapes are shown as dashed lines . At the bottom is a vowel quadrilateral , showing the tongue positions for the English vowels , within the limits ...
... Vowels . The range of articulation is shown as a solid line ; high back and front tongue shapes are shown as dashed lines . At the bottom is a vowel quadrilateral , showing the tongue positions for the English vowels , within the limits ...
Page 96
... vowels seem to require more muscle activity for their production than others , which has given rise to tense- lax distinctions . They may help differentiate vowels which share almost exactly the same place of constriction , degree of ...
... vowels seem to require more muscle activity for their production than others , which has given rise to tense- lax distinctions . They may help differentiate vowels which share almost exactly the same place of constriction , degree of ...
Contents
3 | 45 |
Willard R Zemlin | 65 |
DISORDERS OF SPEECH VOICE AND LANGUAGE | 107 |
Copyright | |
27 other sections not shown
Common terms and phrases
ability adult aphasia aphasic approach apraxia articulation disorders articulatory ASHA assessment associated audiologist audiology auditory behavior brain breathing cause cavity cerebral palsy chapter child cleft palate clinical clinician communication disorders complex consonants dialects dysarthria English evaluation example factors frequency function glottal glottis Hearing Disorders hearing impaired hearing loss hypernasality individual interactions intervention involved Journal of Speech language disorders language pathologist larynx learning disabilities linguistic lips listening mental retardation motor movement muscles nasal nonverbal normal oral parents pathology patient patterns person pharyngeal phonation phoneme pitch pressure problems procedures produce professional resonance response sentence skills social soft palate speakers specific Speech and Hearing speech and language speech disorders speech sounds speech-language pathologist structure stuttering tasks techniques tion tongue treatment utterances velopharyngeal valve verbal vibration vocal cords vocal folds vocal tract voice disorders vowels words