Treating an aphonic patient is both challenging and rewarding for the speech and language therapist. |
|
His next-door neighbors are a poor family with an aphonic daughter named Zehra, who can see into the future. |
|
Inside the heard voices is an unheard voice, an aphonic voice, as it were. |
|
A 35-year-old woman who complained of having lost her voice several weeks previously was answering all questions put to her in an aphonic whisper. |
|
Subsequent to the surgery, he developed dystonia, which has rendered him essentially aphonic. |
|
Initially he was aphonic, but gradually some voice returned. |
|
But authors admit flaw: all 396 were college students — congenitally loquacious, no jobs, no commutes, no need for aphonic mesmerization by Monday Night Football. |
|