Throat-clear

A throat-clear is a sound made at the back of the throat[1] by tightly constricting the laryngopharyngeal tissues and vibrating the palatoglossal arch and the vocal folds while exhaling thru the nose;[2] this may be done with the mouth slightly opened or completely closed.

The throat-clear is articulated as a single-syllable exclamation, written onomatopoeiacally as "hem";[3] or it may be articulated as a double-syllable sound, written as "ahem",[4] which is expressed by inhaling slightly and then exhaling more forcibly.

Paralanguage

The deliberately executed throat-clear is a nonverbal, paralingual form of metacommunication (see Wikipedia article on Business Etiquette)[5](see Wikipedia article on Paralanguage section The Throat-Clear).

Upper respiratory

The throat-clear may be articulated consciously or unconsciously[6] as a symptom of a number of laryngopharyngeal (upper respiratory tract) ailments.[7]

Voice

Continual throat-clearing is a symptom of chronically dry vocal chords, caused by of insufficiently produced amounts of mucus due to inadequate amounts of water, and excessive amounts of caffeine and alcohol. (Texas Voice Center ENT[8])

References

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