To check a perforation in the disk of the TMJ we need?
A- Cranial imagery
B- Orthography***
C- Traditional tomography
D- Computerized tomography.
---------------------------
From Latin orthographia, spelling is the set of rules that regulate writing. It is part of the normative grammar as it establishes the rules for the correct use of letters and punctuation marks.
Spelling is born from a convention accepted by a linguistic community to preserve the unity of the written language. The institution in charge of regulating these norms is usually known as the Language Academy.
Spelling rules, in general, do not have a direct relationship with the understanding of the text in question. For example: if a person who is fluent in the Spanish language reads a sentence that says “Cout the expectation of bida throughout the world,” he will have no problem understanding the statement. Its correct writing, however, is "Growing life expectancy worldwide" and it surely conveys the message more cleanly and directly, since it avoids the reader the correction process.
Spelling, in short, helps to standardize a language, something that is very important when there are different dialects in the same territory. It is worth mentioning that the rules of spelling are taught during the first years of primary education.
In some languages, spelling bases its norms on phonemes (mental abstractions of speech sounds), as is the case with Spanish. Other languages opt for etymological criteria (that is, they refer to the origin of the words), a situation that promotes the divergence between the writing and the pronunciation of the words.
Many world-renowned writers have requested the abolition or, at least, the simplification of spelling rules. One of them was the Colombian Nobel Prize winner, Gabriel García Márquez. This, however, raises a number of questions and potential problems, which no one has been able to solve one hundred percent.
Our language has the characteristic of being spoken in many countries, located in more than one continent, and this has a direct impact on the variety of accents and regionalisms. This can be considered as a positive and enriching aspect, or as a source of confusion that constantly and inevitably undermines its principles, tearing up its structure year after year and stripping it of its beauty, in pursuit of the incorrect adoption of poorly pronounced foreign terms and misunderstood.
First, we can talk about the letters s and z; In some cities, their pronunciation is different, which makes it easier to remember when each one is used (the most common examples are the words "house" and "hunting"). However, the percentage of populations that do not distinguish them phonetically is much greater, whether they pronounce both as an s or as a z. Closely related to them is c, which can be read as a k or as a z, in the combinations ca, co and cu or ce and ci, respectively.
We live in an era in which it is no longer necessary to write by hand, and this takes us considerably away from language; As if that were not enough, all the devices we use to process text are prepared to assist us, either by correcting our mistakes, or by preventing us from committing them, thanks to its function known as "autocomplete." You cannot justify the decline in spelling with technological advances, just as you cannot blame youth crime movies.
In both cases, the problem lies in education, which is the basis on which living beings rely on us to make decisions. If they do not teach us in time the importance of correct spelling, the great difference between a rich and well written text and an almost random succession of pseudo terms without punctuation, then technology will represent our only chance of keeping a legacy alive That has been with us for centuries.
A- Cranial imagery
B- Orthography***
C- Traditional tomography
D- Computerized tomography.
---------------------------
From Latin orthographia, spelling is the set of rules that regulate writing. It is part of the normative grammar as it establishes the rules for the correct use of letters and punctuation marks.
Spelling is born from a convention accepted by a linguistic community to preserve the unity of the written language. The institution in charge of regulating these norms is usually known as the Language Academy.
Spelling rules, in general, do not have a direct relationship with the understanding of the text in question. For example: if a person who is fluent in the Spanish language reads a sentence that says “Cout the expectation of bida throughout the world,” he will have no problem understanding the statement. Its correct writing, however, is "Growing life expectancy worldwide" and it surely conveys the message more cleanly and directly, since it avoids the reader the correction process.
Spelling, in short, helps to standardize a language, something that is very important when there are different dialects in the same territory. It is worth mentioning that the rules of spelling are taught during the first years of primary education.
In some languages, spelling bases its norms on phonemes (mental abstractions of speech sounds), as is the case with Spanish. Other languages opt for etymological criteria (that is, they refer to the origin of the words), a situation that promotes the divergence between the writing and the pronunciation of the words.
Many world-renowned writers have requested the abolition or, at least, the simplification of spelling rules. One of them was the Colombian Nobel Prize winner, Gabriel García Márquez. This, however, raises a number of questions and potential problems, which no one has been able to solve one hundred percent.
Our language has the characteristic of being spoken in many countries, located in more than one continent, and this has a direct impact on the variety of accents and regionalisms. This can be considered as a positive and enriching aspect, or as a source of confusion that constantly and inevitably undermines its principles, tearing up its structure year after year and stripping it of its beauty, in pursuit of the incorrect adoption of poorly pronounced foreign terms and misunderstood.
First, we can talk about the letters s and z; In some cities, their pronunciation is different, which makes it easier to remember when each one is used (the most common examples are the words "house" and "hunting"). However, the percentage of populations that do not distinguish them phonetically is much greater, whether they pronounce both as an s or as a z. Closely related to them is c, which can be read as a k or as a z, in the combinations ca, co and cu or ce and ci, respectively.
We live in an era in which it is no longer necessary to write by hand, and this takes us considerably away from language; As if that were not enough, all the devices we use to process text are prepared to assist us, either by correcting our mistakes, or by preventing us from committing them, thanks to its function known as "autocomplete." You cannot justify the decline in spelling with technological advances, just as you cannot blame youth crime movies.
In both cases, the problem lies in education, which is the basis on which living beings rely on us to make decisions. If they do not teach us in time the importance of correct spelling, the great difference between a rich and well written text and an almost random succession of pseudo terms without punctuation, then technology will represent our only chance of keeping a legacy alive That has been with us for centuries.
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