Transfer of meaningful information from one person to another.
Communication (p. 598)
Gestures (p. 598)
Illocution (p. 598)
Language (p. 598)
A system of sounds that convey meaning because of shared grammatical and semantic rules.
Utterance (p. 598)
Paralanguage (p. 601)
Sound made by one person to another.
Locution (p. 598)
Words placed in a sequence.
Speech style (p. 602)
Words that are placed in a sequence and the context in which this is done.
The non-linguistic accompaniments of speech.
Prosodic features (p. 601)
Bilingualism (p. 607)
The way in which something is said, rather than the content of what is said.
Social markers (p. 602)
Features of speech style that convey information about mood, context, status, and group membership.
Mathced-guise technique (p. 602)
The ability to speak more then one language.
Speech convergence (p. 606)
Speech accommodation theory (p. 606)
Speech styles (p. 602)
Modification of speech style to the context (e.g. listener, situation) of a face-to-face interindividual conversation.
Speech Accommodation Theory (p. 606)
Speech divergence (p. 606)
Paralanguage (p. 598)
Accent or speech style that is a shift towards another person.
Communication accommodation theory (p. 607)
Accent or speech style that shifts away from another person.
Speech Accommodation theory (p. 606)
Communication Accommodation theory (p. 607)
Modification of verbal and non-verbal communication styles to the context (e.g. listener, situation) of a face-to-face interaction.
Back-Channel Communcation (p. 630)
Conversation (p. 630)
Verbal and non-verbal ways in which listeners let speakers know they are still listening.
Communication Accommodation Theory (p. 607)
Back-channel communication (p. 630)
Display rules (p. 616)
Non-verbal communication (p3 613)
Transfer of meaningful information from one person to another by means other than written or spoken language
Non-verbal communication (p. 613)
Types of non-verbal communication, tick all that apply.
Gaze (p. 620)
Ageism (p. 612)
Proxemics (p. 626)
Personal space (p. 626)
Deindividuation (p. 634)