What is speech and language?
Speech and language are similar but slightly different concepts.
Language is made up of socially shared rules that include the following:
- Semantics or meaning (e.g., "stern" can mean "severity of manner" or "the back of a boat")
- How to make new words (e.g., friend, friendly, unfriendly)
- Grammar (e.g., "I walked to the new restaurant" rather than "walk I restaurant new")
- Social context (e.g., "Could you please open the window?" versus "Hey, open the window now!")
Speech is the verbal means of communicating. Speech consists of the following:
- Articulation: How speech sounds are made
- Voice: The use of the vocal folds and breathing to produce sound (e.g., hoarseness, breathiness, projection)
- Fluency and prosody: The rhythm, intonation, stress, and related attributes of speech
When someone has trouble understanding other people (receptive language), or explaining thoughts, ideas and feelings (expressive language), that is a language disorder.
When someone cannot produce speech sounds correctly or fluently, or has voice problems, that is a speech disorder.