Relaxation
Breathing and Quality
Pitch
Flexibility and Articulation
Volume, Rate, And Projection
100

Before using your voice on stage, you should do this

What is relax

100

This is the muscle that helps with breathing

What is a diaphragm

100

This is the highs and lows in your voice 

What is your pitch

100

Flexibility is using these muscles in a lively manner

What is your face, tongue, jaw, lips, and throat

100

This is what determines a person's volume

What is breath control

200

This is another word for relaxation

What is freedom

200
The element that makes you sound different than everyone else is 

What is quality

200

This quality makes a voice interesting 

What is inflection (the use of pitch in your voice)

200

This is when we begin learning the sounds that words make (vowels and consonants) 

Early Childhood

200

The audience becomes lost and confused when an actor does either of these two things

Speaks too fast, slur their words

300

This is how we sit/stand

What is posture

300

Once actors learn breath control, they should notice that they have more of this

What is energy
300

You can find the pitch of your voice using this

What is a piano

300

An actor may be hesitant to use these, but they are extremely good for communicating on stage

What are pauses

300

Projection is like playing darts.  When you begin to speak you must aim your voice at a _____ ____

What is a directed target

400

Relaxation before a performance does helps with these two things

Improve sound

Smooth movement

400

When performers first begin performing, they're movements can be described like this 

awkward and unnatural

400

These are the two common flaws on stage

High tone and monotone

400

Articulation is shaping sounds into syllables. Reciting these helps improve articulation 

What are tongue twisters

400

As weird as it may sound, having this is CRITICAL to being able to projecting your voice.

What is the right attitude