Filled pause

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

A filled pause is a non-silent pause in an otherwise fluent speech, where instead of a silent pause there is a filler. The filler can be non-lexical or semiarticulate utterances such as huh, uh, erm, um, or hmm. Fillers may also include words such as well, so, I mean, and like, when used in ways that don't change the meaning of the surrounding speech. [1]

This particular type of pause is one of several types of speech disfluencies, which also includes silent pauses, "false starts", phrases that are restarted or repeated, and repeated syllables.

References[edit]

  1. ^ Kosmala, Loulou; Crible, Ludivine (March 2022). "The dual status of filled pauses: Evidence from genre, proficiency and co-occurrence". Language and Speech. 65 (1): 216–239. doi:10.1177/00238309211010862. ISSN 0023-8309. PMID 33977820.

External links[edit]