I am a famous pop singer who sings "Castle on the Hill"
Who is Ed Sheeran?
-----Can I borrow a pen?
What is a block?
This technique is used after the stuttering event.
What is cancellation?
This behavior slows your rate of speech by take quick breaks in between words
What is pausing?
These two speech makers are used to make the /t/ sound
What are the front tongue and ridge?
I was the former Vice President to Barack Obama?
Who is Joe Biden
I um want want to go to the movies. Non-stuttered or stuttered?
What is non-stuttered?
This technique can also be called a "slide"
What is a pull-out?
This technique elongates the vowel sounds in words
What is stretching?
This structure is right behind the upper teeth
What is the alveolar ridge?
This person said "No, I am your father" in a famous movie
Who is Darth Vader/James Earl Jones?
Cancellations --> pull-outs --> preparatory sets
This technique allows air to escape before starting the word
What is pre-phonatory airflow?
This structure is connected to the uvula
What is the soft palate/back roof?
Brain structure may be different for PWS. True or False?
True
When the vocal folds slam together
What is a glottal attack?
The least amount of seconds used during a cancellation
What is three seconds
This behavior is most useful for voiced sounds because it turns the vocal folds on before the word
What is humming?
These are the scientific names for front and back
What are anterior and posterior?
Stuttering when you are 3 years old may be considered typical. True of False?
Changing the words you want to say to something different (e.g., "I want vanilla ice cream" when you really want chocolate)
Escape or avoidance behavior?
What is an avoidance behavior?
"I like to talk"
"What I have to say is worth repeating"
Are examples of what type of statements
What are disclosure statements?
Name one difference between SMT's and FEB's
SMT's are applied to stuttered words. FEB's can be applied to all speech.
The space between the vocal folds
The three nasal sounds?
What is the glottis?
What is /n/ /m/ /ng/