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Learn More About This Book:

Description &
Table of Contents


Read an Excerpt:
The importance of making language structure accessible to teachers.

Download an Excerpt:
Principles for teaching decoding well.

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About the Author



Textbook Features:

Appropriate Courses

Sample Exercise:
An exercise and answers on phoneme counting.

Sample Lesson Plan:
One of the sample lesson plans provided in the appendix.

Glossary:
The "A" entries from the glossary.



Related Titles:

Phonemic Awareness in Young Children

Multisensory Teaching of Basic Language Skills, Second Edition







Glossary

Excerpted from Appendix H of Speech to Print: Language Essentials for Teachers, by Louisa Cook Moats, Ed.D.

Copyright © 2000 by Paul H. Brookes Publishing Co. All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be quoted, reproduced, or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.



Affix A morpheme or meaningful part of a word attached before or after a root or base word to modify its meaning; a category that includes prefixes and suffixes.

Affricate Consonant phoneme articulated as a stop before a fricative, such as /c/ or /j/.

Agent Thematic role of the noun in a sentence whose referent performs the action of the verb (The girl threw the ball).

Allophone A predictable phonetic variant of a phoneme, such as nasalized vowels.

Allophonic variation Systematic variability in production of phonemes; the fact that speech sounds “heard” as the same phoneme differ slightly in articulation depending on where they occur in word, for example the aspirated and unaspirated forms [ph] and [p].

Alphabetic Pertaining to a writing system that uses a symbol for each speech sound of the language.

Alphabetic principle The use of letters and letter combinations to represent phonemes in an orthography.

Alveolar Consonant spoken with the tip of the tongue on the ridge behind the upper teeth, such as /t/.

Anaphora Referential linking between pairs of words within or between sentences; the process of replacing a longer word or phrase with a shorter one, as with the use of a pronoun for a noun or a noun phrase.

Antonyms Words considered to represent opposite meanings.

Articles Determiners; words in a grammatical class of noun modifiers that are not adjectives, such as the, a, an.

Assimilated prefix A prefix changed from its abstract form so that it matches the initial sound of the root to which it is attached, such as at in attach (ad + tach = attach).

Assimilation Process by which the phonetic features of one phoneme influence or are spread to a neighboring phoneme; assimilation results in phonemes becoming similar.

Automaticity Fluent performance without the conscious deployment of attention.

Auxiliary verbs Helping verbs that co-occur with a main verb to denote tense, aspect, or modality (I will have been gone).

A comprehensive glossary in included in the back of Speech to Print. Below are the "A" entries from the glossary.

Speech to Print

ORDERING INFO

Speech to Print
ISBN 1-55766-387-4
Paperback
304 pages / 7 x 10
2000 / $29.95
Stock# 3874


Exam Copy

Speech to Print Workbook
ISBN 1-55766-630-X
Paperback
approx. 90 pages
8-1/2 x 11
February 2003
$22.95
Stock# 630X


Exam Copy

ORDER THE SET AND SAVE!

Speech to Print and Speech to Print Workbook
$47.95
Stock # 6083


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