This volume is one in a series of monographs being issued under the
general title of "Disorders of Human Communication". Each monograph
deals in detail with a particular aspect of vocal communication and its
disorders, and is written by internationally distinguished experts.
Therefore, the series will provide an authoritative source of up-to-date
scientific and clinical informa- tion relating to the whole field of
normal and abnormal speech communication, and as such will succeed the
earlier monumental work "Handbuch der Stimm- und Sprachheilkunde" by R.
Luchsinger and G. E. Arnold (last issued in 1970). This series will
prove invaluable for clinicians, teachers and research workers in
phoniatrics and logopaedics, phonetics and linguistics, speech
pathology, otolaryngology, neurology and neurosurgery, psychology and
psychiatry, paediatrics and audiology. Several of the monographs will
also be useful to voice and singing teachers, and to their pupils. G. E.
Arnold, Jackson, Miss. F. Winckel, Berlin B. D. Wyke, London Preface
This book tries to illustrate the practice as well as the principles
involved in applying linguistics to the analysis of language disability.
In writing it, I have as- sumed an audience of professional speech and
hearing clinicians who have had little or no formal training in
linguistics. Each Chapter therefore begins with a resu- me of the main
theoretical and descriptive principles needed in order to carry out a
clinical linguistic analysis. The relevance oflanguage acquisition
studies is a major theme within this resume.