Sound Inventories
Phonotactics
Patterns
Sound inventories2
Phonotactics2
100

A child’s phonological phonological knowledge is manifested in his/her:

A. What is the contrastive use of phones (e.g., using both “mad” and “mat” to express two different meanings)?

100

These syllable shapes emerge first:

What are open syllables (CV)?

100
Examples of a deviant process are: 

What is initial consonant deletion and final voicing?

100

Assessment of stimulability involves testing whether a child can produce sounds this way:

What is in isolation in direct imitation with or without instructions, cues, imagery, feedback and encouragement?

100

The phonotactic analysis of a child's speech boils down to this question

What is does the child produce enough contrastive word shapes?

200

The best assessment of a child's sound inventory would include:

What is a combination of a single word elicitation and a spontaneous speech sample?

200

A child who produces [fɑt] for “spot” is demonstrating:

What is coalescence?

200

The following process is most common in TD English-speaking 2-year-olds:

What is CC reduction?
200

On the measure of Percent Vowel Correct, 3-year-old typically developing children reach this percent accuracy:

What is nearly 100% correct?
200

The core difficulty experienced by children with CAS is 

What is combining sounds in syllables?

300

When assessing a child’s phonetic inventory using an independent approach, a sound is considered mastered:

When a child produces it consistently, but not necessarily accurately (e.g., /f/ counted in the words [fum] for “thumb” and [baf] for “bath”)?

300

A child who says [dɔdi] for “doggie” is demonstrating: 

What is consonant harmony?
300

A child who exhibits the processes of harmony or reduplication is avoiding:

What is variety of sounds within a word?

300

According to the data collected by Austin and Shriberg (1997), the age at which typically developing children reach over 90% accuracy in the production of consonants they attempt: 

What is between 3 and 4 years of age?
300

A pattern in which all initial consonants are voiced is an example of this process:

What is assimilation?
400

To determine contrast in a child's phonology, one would search for:

What is minimal or near-minimal pairs?
400

Two word–level phonotactic patterns that should disappear very early are: 

What are reduplication and consonant harmony?
400

In phonology, the word “environment” refers to: 

What is position of the target sound within a word?

400

According to the data collected by Austin and Shriberg (1997), 3-year- old children with speech delay on average exhibit this percentage of consonant correct:

What is nearly 70% correct?

400

Targeting final consonant deletion may be more effective with these types of sounds:

What are velars, nasals, or fricatives?

500

When assessing for /ɹ / in a child’s phonetic repertoire, the following words would exemplify this consonantal phone, rather than a vocalic: 

What is a prevocalic R (as in "rain" or "squirrel")?  


500

The sonority hierarchy predicts the following:

What is stops and fricatives occur at the edges of words, while liquids, nasals and glides occur closer to the vowel nucleus?

500

When selecting goals to target in therapy, traditionally priority is given to these sounds:

What are those that affect the earliest emerging sounds, those that affect intelligibility the most, and those that are most frequent in occurrence (40% of occurrence or more)?

500

The most reasonable conclusion regarding progress made by a child who went from highly unintelligible speech, limited to CV monosyllables, to relatively intelligible speech with multisyllabic words, final consonants, and clusters, but with his PCC score remaining low (≈70% correct), is:

What is substantial progress made in the acquisition of phonology, but PCC is a measure that has substantial limitations in capturing it?

500

The maximize onset rule dictates the following:

What is words are divided into syllables in such a way that as many syllables as possible start with a consonant (i.e., onset)?