English language

How to pronounce dysphonia in English?

Toggle Transcript
Type Words
Type of defect of speech, speech defect, speech disorder

Examples of dysphonia

dysphonia
Linda was diagnosed with spasmodic dysphonia, preventing her from singing.
From the en.wikipedia.org
Spasmodic dysphonia comes from spasms of the vocal-cord muscles.
From the stltoday.com
Flint told him spasmodic dysphonia is manageable, but incurable.
From the abcnews.go.com
Spasmodic dysphonia causes his larynx to quiver involuntarily.
From the denverpost.com
The mean fatigue score in patients with functional dysphonia was 17.0 and 14.4 for the controls.
From the sciencedaily.com
The mean perfectionism scores were 98.9 for patients with functional dysphonia and 91.2 for controls.
From the sciencedaily.com
I lost my voice to spasmodic dysphonia for three years.
From the well.blogs.nytimes.com
The most rewarding cases to treat, he said, are those with Neff's condition, called functional dysphonia.
From the desmoinesregister.com
Dysphonia had it easy in front at Rosehill when she wasn't expected to go so well due to the rain-affected track.
From the brimbankweekly.com.au
More examples
  • Speech disorder attributable to a disorder of phonation
  • Dysphonia is the medical term for disorders of the voice: an impairment in the ability to produce voice sounds using the vocal organs (it is distinct from dysarthria which means disorders of speech, that is, an impairment in the ability to produce spoken words). ...
  • Any impairment of the voice or difficulty speaking.
  • Voice disorder, often related to weakness of laryngeal muscles, in which sound production is impaired
  • Trouble with the voice when trying to talk, including hoarseness and change in pitch or quality or voice.
  • Problems with the voice, often resulting in weaker or hoarse sounds.
  • Voice disorder in which the quality and / or volume of the voice is changed. Dysphonia can be caused by misusing the voice.
  • Dysphonia is poor voice quality; dys- means bad, and phon- means sound. The term dysphonia can also mean the vocal sound is acceptable but the person has discomfort while phonating. Term found in About the Voice: Anatomy 201.
  • Difficulty in speaking; hoarseness.