Across
- 5. / Breathing Tube of joy.
- 7. / The flappy flap that stops you from the choky choke.
- 9. / the primary resonator for vocal sounds. Vowels tend to be most closely associated with this space. It is defined as the Pharyngeal space behind the mouth from the Epiglottis to the Soft Palate. It exists mostly behind the Tongue and is defined almost completely by soft tissue.
- 10. / Activated when pressing your hand against the front of your head or the back of your head.
- 11. / Two small, elongated pieces of yellow elastic cartilage, placed one on either side, in the aryepiglottic fold.
- 12. / The vocal chords place of residence.
- 13. / Used for intense singing or phonation, belting especially, this is activated by mimicking holding suitcases, holding melons under your arms, or putting on a swim cap.
- 16. / provide attachments for the cricothyroid muscle, posterior cricoarytenoid muscle and lateral cricoarytenoid muscle muscles, cartilages, and ligaments involved in opening and closing the airway and in speech production.
- 17. / This breath is used for low air pressure, classical, and operatic sounds.
- 19. / Flaring the nostrils to engage muscles behind the soft palate to aid in high larynx, head voice, singing.
- 22. / The first space that the Larynx opens into Resonator behind the larynx and can be changed with the lifting and lowering of the larynx.
- 23. / an apparatus that increases the resonance of a sound, especially a hollow part of a musical instrument.
- 24. / This breath is used for high air pressure belt, pop, and rock sounds.
Down
- 1. / provides attachment to the muscles of the floor of the mouth and the tongue above, the larynx below, and the epiglottis and pharynx behind.
- 2. / When your larynx lowers, your vocal chords get ______________.
- 3. / They Allow the vocal folds to be tensed, relaxed, or approximated. They articulate with the supero-lateral parts of the cricoid cartilage lamina, forming the cricoarytenoid joints at which they can come together, move apart, tilt anteriorly or posteriorly, and rotate.
- 4. / the highest part of the Pharynx. It exists above the mouth and behind the nose. It is the largest open space of the three Pharyngeal areas and is the most fixed. This means it is unable to close, making it an ideal resonator. The Eustachian tubes open into it, making it the path connecting our vocal sound to the ear internally. This area is referred to as the “ng” resonator from the sensation of resonance that results from the “ng” vocal sound found in words with that spelling, like “sing” and “hung”. It is also referred to as the Head Resonator.
- 6. / We do this breath everyday all the time.
- 8. / the upper pair, each of which encloses a vestibular ligament, extends from one side of the thyroid cartilage in front to the arytenoid cartilage on the same side of the larynx in back, and is not directly concerned with speech production.
- 14. / How much of a certain technique is needed.
- 15. / On these, the edges of can be made to tense and relax by the passage of air from the lungs, thus producing vocal sound.
- 18. / When You're larynx rises, your vocal chords get _____________.
- 20. / The part of the larynx consisting of the vocal cords and the slitlike opening between them. It affects voice modulation through expansion or contraction.
- 21. / A fancy name for the throat and your main source of vocal resonation.
