1. Phonetics study of speech sounds
2. Articualtors Parts of the oral tract that are used to produce sound
3. Articulatory Phonetics Emphasize the position of those articulators when
making
sounds
4. Acoustic phonetics the physics of sound
5. t/f As an SLP, you would True
rely upon articulatory
phonetics to teach
someone how to produce a
sound.
linguistic, response and system complexity
6. subdomains that influence
the skill based component
of clinical phonetics
7. Broad transciption How a word Is "supposed" to be said. Uses
slashes. Only
records primary sounds in target word phonemic
transcrip- tion
8. Narrow Transcription How a person actually produced a word. Uses
brackets. Uses
diacritics to provide extra details. Phonetic
transcription
9. Diacritic a sign, such as an accent or cedilla, which when
written above or below a letter indicates a
ditterence in pronun- ciation from the same letter
when unmarked or ditterently marked.
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, SHS 250 TEST 1 QUESTIONS AND CORRECT ANSWERS
10. Allophone Phonetic variant of a phoneme. EX. [p] & [pH] are
allo- phones of /p/.
11. free variation
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