Vocalisation in a sentence as a noun

Depends what you mean by sub vocalisation - some people move their lips when they read - this slows things down.

I would have thought if you could read by sub-vocalisation then you could talk to yourself.

On the other hand, language seems to be mostly perceived as vocalisation, because that's the form it's learned from.

A bit like if you're speed reading and skip the internal vocalisation, the word is before my mind, but not in a vocal sense.

Greek letters have simpler vocalisations than "c4" or whatever, though?

I learnt to read aloud first, then read silently which I always remember doing by sub-vocalisation.

At this point it sounds like you're trying to use a non-physics based concept for voice [the parameters of sound produced by vocalisation].

Usually you would use bold like that where you would stress the vocalisation when reading it aloud, not for highlighting key points you want to make.

Possibly, other people read without sub-vocalisation which I suspect would allow you to read faster.

This actually caused me some problems trying to learn to meditate - I can't grasp focusing on something if I can't have the internal vocalisation with it.

With this common basis for sound, I don't think it is too suprising that our use of vocalisation relate in some way at the very basic level across languages.

Hence, the need for vocalisation?Once they know something well, or are happy with what they know and the decision they have come to for themselves, they do not feel the need to talk about it?

In a few decennies any spoken language has shifted, vocalisation is different, especially when the language is used by loosely coulped communities.

I would be extremely surprised if vocalisation wasn't entirely voluntary in every single vertebrate species.

Maybe this fragmentation would be much less if they had a phonetic writing system in the first place.> In a few decennies any spoken language has shifted, vocalisation is different, especially when the language is used by loosely coulped communities.

Vocalisation definitions

noun

the sound made by the vibration of vocal folds modified by the resonance of the vocal tract; "a singer takes good care of his voice"; "the giraffe cannot make any vocalizations"

See also: voice vocalization vocalism phonation