Anatomy
Hear ye, hear ye
Figure of speech
Now you're speaking my language
Random
100

The three middle ear bones

What are the malleus, the incus and the stapes or will accept the ossicles

100

The graph where hearing thresholds are plotted

What is an audiogram
100

A sound that utilizes the alveolar ridge

/t/, /d/, /l/, /s/, /z/, /n/, /r/

100

a neutral label that refers to a variation of a language that is shared by a group of speakers


what is a dialect

100

The profession that our guest, Bill Hampstead practiced prior to his stroke

What is psychology

200

The only bone in our body that is "floating," ie, not connected to another bone

What is the hyoid bone

200

The two pathways of hearing

What are air conduction and bone conduction

200

the class of speech sound where the sound can be held out, such as /s/

what are fricatives

200

The written language used by SLPs for transcribing speech sounds

What is IPA (international phonetic alphabet)

200

The term when you are deliberately stuttering

What is psuedo-stuttering
300

The pyramid shaped cartilages responsible for moving the vocal folds

What are the arytenoid cartilages

300

The acoustic correlate of the term "pitch"

What is frequency

300

This is the term for a sound that is made with both lips closing, such as a /b/

What is bilabial

300

The linguistics term meaning the relation of language to social function or the social implications of language

What is Pragmatics

300

A written document for students with disabilities ages 3 through 25 that outlines the student's educational needs and goals and any programs and services the intermediate school district must provide

What is an IEP

400
The name of the process of contracting and releasing muscles to push food down the esophagus

What is peristalsis

400

The three types of hearing loss

What are conductive, sensorineural and mixed

400

The part of the vocal tract that is responsible for closing off the nasal cavity during swallowing and speaking

What is the soft palate or velum

400

Along with "rule-governed," another one of the 5 attributes of language

socially shared, arbitrary code, generative process, dynamic

400

The term for the ball of food/spit you form in your mouth when swallowing

What is a bolus

500

The term that describes how frequencies are coded at particular locations in the auditory system

What is tonotopicity or tonotopic organization

500

A disorder that would cause a conductive hearing loss

What is: otitis media, wax occlusion, otosclerosis, ossicular disarticulation, cholesteatoma, perforation ,etc

500

An example of a phonological process

what are: velar fronting, stopping, final consonant deletion, unstressed syllable deletion

500

The term for the modern perspective of language acquisition, that combines the "nature" and "nurture" perspectives

What is gene-environment interaction

500

What ASHA stands for

American Speech (language) and Hearing Association

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