Glossary

Glossary

Understand key terms and concepts in speech-language pathology. Whether you’re a seasoned clinician or just starting out, this glossary is here to support your learning and practice.
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AAC (Augmentative and Alternative Communication)

Tools or strategies to help individuals with communication impairments express themselves, such as speech-generating devices or communication boards.

ASHA (American Speech-Language-Hearing Association)

The national organization that certifies SLPs and audiologists and sets professional standards.

Acalculia

Acalculia is a loss of previously acquired calculation skills due to brain damage. It may occur alongside aphasia or cognitive impairment and affect functional independence.

Accent Modification

Accent Modification helps clients improve speech clarity for personal or professional reasons. SLPs guide pronunciation training through individualized, culturally sensitive techniques.

Adult Dysphagia

Dysphagia in adults refers to difficulty in swallowing, encompassing problems in the oral, pharyngeal, or esophageal phases of the swallowing process. It often results from neurological conditions, structural anomalies, or systemic diseases, leading to risks like aspiration, malnutrition, and dehydration.

Affricates

Affricates are consonant sounds that begin as stops and release as fricatives, with both stages produced in the same place of articulation. In English, the two affricate phonemes are /tʃ/ (as in “church”) and /dʒ/ (as in “judge”), which start with a complete closure of the articulators and then release into a turbulent, fricative-like airflow.

Alternating Motion Rates (AMRs)

Alternating Motion Rates (AMRs) refer to the rapid repetition of the same syllable (e.g., “puh-puh-puh”) to assess how quickly and smoothly a person can move their articulators. It is a key clinical task for measuring articulatory speed and regularity, with abnormal AMR performance suggesting possible motor speech disorder.

Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis (ALS)

Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis (ALS) is a progressive neurodegenerative disease that causes loss of voluntary muscle control, including those used for speech and swallowing.

Anomic Aphasia

Anomic aphasia is a mild, fluent aphasia marked by persistent word-finding difficulty despite otherwise intact speech.

Aphasia

Aphasia is an acquired language disorder caused by damage to the brain’s language regions, most commonly from stroke, that impairs the ability to understand or produce spoken, written, or gestural language. Despite intact intelligence, individuals with aphasia may have difficulty finding words, forming sentences, comprehending language, or using language appropriately in conversation.

Apraxia

A motor planning disorder where the brain struggles to coordinate muscle movements for speech.

Apraxia of Speech (AOS)

Apraxia of Speech is a motor speech disorder resulting from neurological injury, causing difficulty in planning and programming the movements needed for accurate speech production. Individuals know what they want to say, but their speech is distorted, slow, and marked by groping and sound sequencing errors.

Articulation

Articulation is the physical process of shaping speech sounds using the lips, tongue, teeth, palate, and jaw.

Articulation Disorder

Articulation disorders are motor-based speech sound disorders where specific phonemes are produced incorrectly, often affecting intelligibility. Treatment targets the placement and movement of articulators through drill-based and contextualized therapy.

Aspiration

Entry of food, liquid, or other materials into the airway below the vocal folds, which can lead to pneumonia and other respiratory complications.

Ataxic Dysarthria

Ataxic dysarthria results from cerebellar damage and causes uncoordinated, slurred speech with irregular rhythm and stress.

Attention-Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD)

ADHD is a neurodevelopmental disorder characterized by inattention, impulsivity, and hyperactivity that can affect communication skills.

Auditory Processing Disorder (APD)

A neurological condition where the brain has difficulty interpreting auditory information, even though hearing sensitivity is normal, often leading to challenges with understanding speech in noise or following oral instructions.

Autism Spectrum Disorder (ASD)

Autism Spectrum Disorder is a neurodevelopmental condition marked by persistent deficits in social communication and the presence of restricted, repetitive behaviors. Language and communication abilities vary widely, with many individuals exhibiting pragmatic language impairments and atypical speech patterns.

Avoidant/Restrictive Food Intake Disorder (ARFID)

Avoidant/Restrictive Food Intake Disorder (ARFID) is an eating and feeding disorder characterized by restricted food intake that results in inadequate nutrition or energy, without concerns about body image or weight. It often stems from sensory sensitivities, low appetite, or fear of negative experiences like choking, leading to significant health and psychosocial consequences.

Backing

Replacing a front consonant with a back consonant (e.g., saying “kuh” for “tuh”), an atypical speech error in English.

Bedside Swallow Evaluation (Clinical Swallow Evaluation)

A hands-on swallowing assessment (conducted without instruments) where an SLP observes how a patient swallows different consistencies to screen for dysphagia.

Bilateral Hearing Loss

Hearing loss in both ears, which can range from mild to profound and impact speech and language development.

Blocks

Blocks are involuntary speech stoppages where airflow or voicing is momentarily halted, commonly in stuttering.

Bolus

A bolus is a cohesive mass of food or liquid prepared for swallowing.

Brain Tumor

A brain tumor is a mass of abnormal cells growing in the brain. Brain tumors can disrupt normal brain function; for example, a tumor in the left frontal lobe might cause speech and language problems, so individuals with brain tumors may require evaluation and therapy from an SLP to help maintain or regain communication and swallowing abilities.

Broad Phonetic Transcription

A general method for documenting speech sounds using the International Phonetic Alphabet (IPA), focusing on major sound features.

Broca’s Aphasia

Broca’s aphasia is a nonfluent language disorder characterized by slow, effortful speech with preserved comprehension.

Broca’s Area

Broca’s Area is a region in the left frontal lobe that controls speech production and language expression. Injury to Broca’s area (such as in Broca’s aphasia) leads to slow, labored speech with short phrases and omissions, while comprehension of language is relatively preserved, making it a key focus in speech therapy for aphasic patients.

Cerebral Palsy

Cerebral Palsy is a non-progressive neurological disorder that appears early in life and affects muscle control and posture due to brain damage during development.

Cheiloplasty

Cheiloplasty is the surgical correction of a cleft lip. In this surgery (usually done around 3 months of age), the two sides of a split upper lip are joined together and the lip muscle is repaired, which improves feeding and helps the child form bilabial speech sounds.

Childhood Apraxia of Speech (CAS)

Childhood Apraxia of Speech is a pediatric motor speech disorder in which children struggle to coordinate the movements necessary for intelligible speech, despite having no muscle weakness. Speech errors are highly inconsistent and often accompanied by disrupted prosody and difficulty transitioning between sounds.

Clarity

The ease with which speech is understood by a listener – essentially, the understandability or intelligibility of spoken words.

Cleft Lip

Cleft lip is a congenital separation in the upper lip that can be unilateral or bilateral, often impacting feeding and early speech sound development. Surgical repair typically occurs within the first year, followed by ongoing monitoring by an SLP and cleft team.

Cleft Palate

Cleft palate is a structural defect where the roof of the mouth fails to fully close, impairing feeding and speech due to velopharyngeal insufficiency. Intervention includes surgical repair, speech therapy for resonance and articulation, and interdisciplinary follow-up.

Cluster Reduction

Cluster reduction is when a child simplifies a consonant cluster by dropping one of the consonants (e.g., saying “fog” for “frog” or “nake” for “snake”). It’s a normal simplification in early speech, but children typically outgrow this pattern by about 4–5 years old as their speech matures.

Cluttering

Cluttering is a fluency disorder marked by an abnormally rapid and/or irregular rate of speech, often accompanied by disorganized language formulation and reduced intelligibility. Speakers who clutter produce excessive speech dysfluencies that are not typical of stuttering (e.g. mazes, filler words, word and phrase repetitions), and they frequently omit or slur sounds in longer words. 

Cochlear Implants

Cochlear Implants provide access to sound for individuals with severe hearing loss. SLPs support language and auditory development before and after implantation.

Cognitive-Communication Disorder

A cognitive-communication disorder involves difficulty using language appropriately due to impairments in attention, memory, executive function, or reasoning. Speech may be fluent and grammatically correct, but the individual struggles with organizing thoughts, maintaining topics, interpreting social cues, or adapting language to context.

Communication Disorder

A communication disorder is an impairment in the ability to understand, express, or process language and speech through spoken, written, gestural, or symbolic forms. It may affect speech production, language comprehension or use, and auditory processing, and must interfere with social, academic, or daily functioning to be clinically significant.

Conversion Disorders (Functional Neurological Symptom Disorders)

Neurological symptoms such as voice loss or stuttering that arise without an identifiable medical cause, often linked to psychological stress and classified under functional neurological symptom disorders.

Core Vocabulary

A speech therapy method where a child learns to say a tailored set of important words consistently, used especially for treating highly inconsistent speech errors.

Cultural and Linguistic Diversity (CLD)

Variation in culture, ethnicity, and language among individuals and client populations, requiring SLPs to provide culturally responsive and linguistically appropriate services.

Delayed Language

A developmental condition in which a child’s language abilities emerge later than expected for their age, despite following the typical sequence of language milestones. It may affect expressive, receptive, or both aspects of language.

Dementia

Dementia is a progressive neurological condition that impairs memory, language, and other cognitive functions.

Developmental Coordination Disorder (DCD)

Developmental Coordination Disorder (DCD) is a neurodevelopmental condition marked by significant difficulties in acquiring and executing coordinated motor skills, which interfere with daily functioning and are not explained by other medical or intellectual conditions. It often presents in childhood as clumsiness or motor delays and frequently co-occurs with speech-language impairments, ADHD, or learning disorders.

Developmental Language Disorder (DLD)

Developmental Language Disorder (DLD) is a lifelong neurodevelopmental condition marked by persistent difficulties in understanding and/or using spoken language, not attributable to hearing loss, intellectual disability, or other known conditions. It affects vocabulary, grammar, and discourse skills, often emerging in early childhood and significantly impacting academic, social, and communication development.

Diadochokinesis (DDK)

The rapid alternation of muscle movements, commonly tested in speech by having a person repeat sequences of syllables at maximum speed.

Distortions

Distortions are speech errors in which a sound is produced in an unfamiliar or imprecise way that deviates from the norm, but it does not become a different phoneme. A common example is a lisped /s/—the sound is recognizable as an /s/ but is articulated incorrectly (e.g. with the tongue placed too far forward, causing a “th”-like quality).

Down syndrome

Down syndrome is a genetic disorder (trisomy 21) that causes intellectual disability and speech-language delays. SLPs work to improve expressive language and intelligibility in affected individuals.

Dysarthria

Dysarthria is a motor speech disorder caused by neurological injury or disease that weakens or disrupts the coordination of muscles used for speech. Unlike language or fluency disorders, dysarthria impairs the execution of speech movements, often resulting in slurred, strained, or breathy speech.

Dysarthria (Adults)

Dysarthria in adults is a collective term for motor speech disorders resulting from neurological impairments affecting the strength, speed, range, steadiness, tone, or accuracy of movements required for speech. It can impact respiration, phonation, articulation, resonance, and prosody.

Dysfluency

Dysfluency is an interruption in the flow of speech, such as repetitions or hesitations. It is commonly associated with stuttering and may require speech-language intervention.

Dyskinesia

Dyskinesia is the presence of abnormal, involuntary movements that disrupt motor control. When it affects speech musculature, SLPs address its impact through dysarthria treatment and swallowing management.

Dyslexia

Dyslexia is a reading disorder involving difficulty with word recognition and phonological decoding. It affects literacy and is often supported by SLPs through reading-based interventions.

Dysphagia (Swallowing Disorder)

Dysphagia (difficulty swallowing) is a disorder that disrupts the safe and efficient movement of food, liquids, or saliva through the oral, pharyngeal, or esophageal phases of swallowing. It can lead to risks such as aspiration, malnutrition, and dehydration and is commonly associated with neurological or structural impairments.

Dysphonia

Dysphonia is a voice disorder involving abnormal vocal quality, pitch, or loudness. It often requires voice therapy from an SLP to restore healthy voice use.

Early Intervention (EI)

Early intervention is a system of services for infants and toddlers from birth to age three who have developmental delays or are at risk, aiming to support growth across cognitive, communicative, physical, social-emotional, and adaptive domains during a critical period of brain development. Services are family-centered, delivered in natural environments, and guided by an Individualized Family Service Plan (IFSP) under Part C of the Individuals with Disabilities Education Act (IDEA).

Echolalia

Echolalia is the repetition of words or phrases spoken by others, often seen in individuals with autism or developmental disorders.

Elemental Formula

A type of infant or enteral formula composed of free amino acids rather than intact or partially broken-down proteins. These are used for infants with severe allergies or GI issues such as exocrine pancreatic insufficiency, as they are easier to digest and absorb.

Esophageal Dysphagia

Esophageal dysphagia is difficulty in the esophageal phase of swallowing, often experienced as food sticking in the chest or throat.

Esophageal Speech

Esophageal speech is a voicing technique using esophageal vibration after laryngectomy. It allows speech without a larynx and is taught by SLPs.

Esophagus

A muscular conduit of the digestive tract that carries food and liquid from the throat to the stomach.

Evidence-Based Practice (EBP)

The integration of clinical expertise, patient preferences, and research evidence to guide therapy decisions.

Executive Function Deficits

Executive function deficits are impairments in cognitive processes like planning, working memory, cognitive flexibility, and inhibition control, often resulting from frontal lobe damage.

Executive Functions

Mental skills that involve managing one’s own cognition and behavior (e.g., planning, focusing attention, remembering, self-control), which are critical for organized, effective communication.

Expressive Language

Expressive language is the ability to put thoughts into words, sentences, or other forms of communication so that others can understand. It encompasses everything from speaking and writing to gesturing, and deficits in expressive language result in difficulty communicating one’s ideas effectively.

Expressive Language Disorder

Expressive Language Disorder involves difficulties with verbal expression, including challenges in vocabulary, sentence formation, and narrative structure. Individuals may understand language normally but have significant trouble producing grammatically and semantically appropriate speech.

Eye gaze (AAC)

An access method for communication systems where the user communicates by looking at symbols or letters on a screen, which are tracked by an eye-tracker to select messages.

FEES (Fiberoptic Endoscopic Evaluation of Swallowing)

A swallowing assessment using a flexible nasoendoscope to visually examine the throat during swallowing, in order to detect aspiration and diagnose dysphagia.

Final Consonant Deletion

The omission of a closing consonant sound at the end of a word (e.g., saying “ca” for “cat”), a normal pattern in early speech that becomes a concern if it continues past the typical age.

Flaccid Dysarthria

Flaccid dysarthria is caused by lower motor neuron damage and features weak, breathy, and hypernasal speech.

Fluency

Fluency refers to the smoothness, rhythm, and effort of spoken language.

Fluency Disorders

Fluency disorders, including stuttering and cluttering, are characterized by disruptions in the flow of speech such as repetitions, prolongations, and blocks. SLPs assess the type and severity of disfluency and provide individualized therapy to increase fluency and reduce negative communication attitudes.

Fricatives

Fricatives are consonant sounds produced by forcing air through a narrow constriction in the vocal tract, creating turbulent, noisy airflow. Examples in English include /f, v, s, z, ʃ, ʒ, θ, ð, h/, which are characterized by their continuous “hissing” or “buzzing” sound quality.

Frontal Lisp (Interdental Lisp)

An interdental lisp is a speech error where the tongue protrudes between the teeth during /s/ and /z/, producing a “th” sound.

Fronting

Fronting is a speech process where a child substitutes sounds made in the back of the mouth with sounds made in the front (e.g., saying “tup” for “cup”). It is normal in toddlers’ speech but becomes a concern if it continues past the age when children usually outgrow it (around 4 years old).

Functional Communication

Practical and purposeful communication skills used in daily life, such as requesting or refusing.

Functional Communication Training (FCT)

A strategy where problematic behaviors are reduced by teaching the person a new communication method to get the same need met (e.g., requesting “all done” instead of throwing items).

Functional Speech Sound Disorder

Functional speech sound disorders are difficulties in producing speech sounds without any identifiable structural, neurological, or sensory cause. They are typically idiopathic and distinguished from organic speech disorders by the absence of an observable medical explanation.

Gender-Affirming Voice Therapy

A person-centered approach to voice and communication modification that helps align voice characteristics with gender identity.

Gestalt Language Processing

A natural language development path where individuals initially learn and use language in whole, meaningful chunks or "gestalts" rather than single words.

Gliding

A speech pattern where /r/ or /l/ is replaced by a glide (/w/ or /y/), as in saying “wun” for “run”; a normal process in young children’s speech that typically disappears by age 5–6.

Global Aphasia

Global aphasia is a severe language disorder affecting all aspects of language comprehension and expression.

Glottal Stops

A glottal stop is a consonant produced by briefly closing the vocal folds (glottis) and then releasing them, like the catch in the throat in the middle of “uh-oh.” In typical English speech, the glottal stop is not a distinct phoneme, but it often appears as a casual replacement or reinforcement for /t/ in certain contexts (e.g., “butter” pronounced as “bu’er”).

Goal Setting

The process of identifying specific objectives for therapy based on individual needs and strengths.

Grammar

The set of structural rules in a language that dictates how words are formed and arranged into sentences, enabling speakers to convey complex meanings correctly.

Grammar Therapy

Language intervention that focuses on teaching correct grammar usage (word forms and sentence structure), enabling clients to form sentences that follow the rules of their language.

Grammatical Morphemes

Small units of language that add meaning to words, such as -s for plural or -ed for past tense, often targeted in therapy.

Gross Motor Skills

Movements involving large muscles, such as walking or jumping, which may indirectly affect speech development.

Group Therapy

A therapy format involving multiple participants, promoting peer interaction and communication practice.

Growth Mindset

A belief in the ability to improve skills through effort and learning, encouraged in therapy to foster motivation.

Habilitation

A process of therapy or intervention focused on helping a person acquire new skills or abilities (such as communication skills) that they have not developed previously, as opposed to restoring lost skills.

Hearing Aid

A device that amplifies sound for individuals with hearing loss, often integrated into auditory rehabilitation.

Hearing Loss

A reduction in the ability to detect or understand sounds, ranging from mild impairment to complete deafness, which can affect one or both ears and often impacts a person’s communication abilities and language development.

High-Tech AAC

Electronic or computer-based communication devices with complex capabilities.

Hoarseness

Rough or harsh voice quality, often indicating vocal pathology.

Holistic Approach

Treatment considering the whole person, including physical, social, and emotional aspects.

Home Program

Therapy activities assigned for practice at home to reinforce skills learned in sessions.

Homonymy

Homonymy occurs when a child’s speech errors cause two or more different words to sound the same. For example, if a child says “tap” for “cap” and also “tap” for “sap,” the words “cap,” “sap,” and “tap” all become “tap,” making their speech difficult to understand.
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