I have in mind here a cough, a tsk, a grunt, a snort and so on, all used to communicate something but only quasi-words at most.
I seem to remember there is a term for these, but I cannot recall it.
Thanks.
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I have in mind here a cough, a tsk, a grunt, a snort and so on, all used to communicate something but only quasi-words at most.
I seem to remember there is a term for these, but I cannot recall it.
Thanks.
Hi and welcome to Using English.
Do you mean "onomatopoeia"?
I don’t think he means onomatopoeia, Barb.
Some of the “words” you are talking about are interjections, although many interjections are “real” words.
I am interested to know if there is a better term for this group of vocalisations.
How about vocal segregates? And paralanguage is used for the general area.
You could try "ejaculation".
ejaculation [ɪˌdʒækjʊˈleɪʃən]
n 1. an abrupt emphatic utterance or exclamation
ejaculation - definition of ejaculation by the Free Online Dictionary, Thesaurus and Encyclopedia.
When babies do it, technically it's called babbling. Adults can also babble.
babbling - definition of babbling by the Free Online Dictionary, Thesaurus and Encyclopedia.
Gurgling is an informal term for babies.
"Vocalising" can include words and non-words.
Non-word vocal production ...
I think there's also "paraverbals" -- things that are, uh, like words but, umm, not.
There's also Phatic - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia, but that's not non-verbal.
b
Hi everybody,
There is also the linguistic term: backchannels. It refers to both verbal and non-verbal responses to indicate interest, such as uh huh, hmm, tsk, oh really.