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visible speech
noun
Phonetics.
- the representation in graphic or pictorial form of characteristics of speech, as by means of sound spectrograms.
- the system of handwritten phonetic symbols invented by Melville Bell in 1867 to provide a visually comprehensible rendition of speech sounds.
visible speech
noun
- a system of phonetic notation invented by Alexander Melville Bell (1819–1905) that utilized symbols based on the schematic representation of the articulations used for each speech sound
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˜yÐÄvlog History and Origins
Origin of visible speech1
First recorded in 1850–55
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Example Sentences
Examples have not been reviewed.
Of course, babies cannot access visible speech cues if others are wearing masks.
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Mr. Bell was at this time an instructor in phonetics, or the art of visible speech, in Monroe's School of Oratory in Boston.
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His father was Alexander Melville Bell, a Scotch educator, inventor of a system of visible speech, and author of some text-books on elocution.
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He was also professor of Vocal Physiology at Boston University where he had courses in lip reading, or a system of visible speech, which his father had evolved.
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A later and better system is that called "visible speech."
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