n.
[L. fluentia: cf. F. fluence. See
The quality of being fluent; smoothness; readiness of utterance; volubility.
The art of expressing with fluency and perspicuity.Macaulay.
| Dictionary: Flu·en·cy |
[L. fluentia: cf. F. fluence. See
The quality of being fluent; smoothness; readiness of utterance; volubility.
The art of expressing with fluency and perspicuity.Macaulay.
| Antonyms: fluency |
Definition: eloquence
Antonyms: inarticulacy
n
Definition: fluidity
Antonyms: jerkiness
| Wikipedia: Fluency |
Fluency (also called volubility and loquaciousness) is the property of a person or of a system that delivers information quickly and with expertise.
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Fluency is a speech language pathology term that means the smoothness or flow with which sounds, syllables, words and phrases are joined together when speaking quickly. [1]. Fluency disorders is used as a collective term for cluttering and stuttering. Both disorders have breaks in the fluidity of speech, and both have the fluency breakdown of repetition of parts of speech. Fluency disorders are most often complex in nature and they tend to occur more often in boys than in girls[2].
Language fluency is used informally to denote broadly a high level of language proficiency, most typically foreign language or another learned language, and more narrowly to denote fluid language use, as opposed to slow, halting use. In this narrow sense, fluency is necessary but not sufficient for language proficiency: fluent language users (particularly uneducated native speakers) may have narrow vocabularies, limited discourse strategies, and inaccurate word use, and may be illiterate. Native language speakers are often incorrectly referred to as fluent.
In the sense of proficiency, "fluency" encompasses a number of related but separable skills:
To some extent, these skills can be separately acquired. Generally, the later in life a learner approaches the study of a foreign language, the harder it is to acquire auditory comprehension and fluent speaking skills – however, the Critical Period Hypothesis is hotly debated. Reading and writing a foreign language are skills that can be acquired more easily after the primary language acquisition period of youth is over, however.
Reading fluency is often confused with fluency with a language (see above). Reading fluency is the ability to read text accurately and quickly. Fluency bridges word decoding and comprehension. Comprehension is understanding what has been read. Fluency is a set of skills that allows readers to rapidly decode text while maintaining high comprehension (National Reading Panel, 2001).
A first benchmark for fluency is being able to "sight read" some words. The idea is that children will recognize at sight the most common words in the written form of their native language and that instant reading of these words will allow them to read and understand text more quickly.
As children learn to read, the speed at which they read becomes an important measure.
(National Reading Panel, Teaching Children to Read: An Evidence-Based Assessment of the Scientific Research Literature on Reading and Its Implications for Reading Instruction--Reports of the Subgroups. A complete copy of the NRP report can be read, downloaded, or ordered at no cost from the NRP website at www.nationalreadingpanel.org.)
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| fluence | |
| flowingness | |
| liquidness |
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