What's the difference between fluency and fluently?
Fluency
Definition:
(n.) The quality of being fluent; smoothness; readiness of utterance; volubility.
Example Sentences:
(1) Teaching procedures then establish and build these key components to fluency.
(2) "I find fluency on TV and radio now something that is easy in a way that three or four years ago I found very hard.
(3) As predicted by the perceptual fluency hypothesis, and as has been found in previous research, the recognition judgments were more positive for identified words than for unidentified words.
(4) Two experiments evaluated the hypothesis that perceptual fluency is used to infer prior occurrence.
(5) For fluency (from the Western Aphasia Battery), subcortical structural damage had direct and indirect (through frontal lobe) effects on the behavior.
(6) Sixteen normally performing and 16 children with learning disabilities were administered this task and a control task of verbal fluency.
(7) On a verbal fluency test (FAS) requiring the subject to retrieve items from different categories, Wilson's patients with neurologic disease generated significantly fewer words than control subjects (p less than .01).
(8) Further, word-completion priming, but not perceptual priming, was correlated with verbal fluency performance in AD.
(9) First, to examine the extent to which fluency measures are affected by conditions of speech production.
(10) Tests of memory and verbal fluency were administered to 19 neurologically impaired Wilson's patients, 12 non-neurologically impaired Wilson's patients and 15 normal control subjects.
(11) However, their errors on the latter were not typical of patients with frontal lesions, and they performed normally on a letter fluency task and exhibited normal release from proactive interference.
(12) A multivariate factorial analysis of variance indicated that the mentally retarded deaf adolescents differed significantly from hearing adolescents on Fluency and Originality.
(13) Neuropsychological tests employed where the color slide test, digit symbol test, digit span test, logical memory test, word fluency test, and the Mini-Mental State Examination.
(14) The pattern of cognitive decline was not uniform: MS patients were more frequently impaired on measures of recent memory, sustained attention, verbal fluency, conceptual reasoning, and visuospatial perception, and less frequently impaired on measures of language and immediate and remote memory.
(15) They were defensively more secure than they had been, but lacked the fluidity and fluency of movement that characterised them even in the quarter-final against Colombia.
(16) It started with her surprise appearance onstage at last year's party conference, and the winning fluency and warmth with which she introduced her husband.
(17) Arsenal had not even led against Chelsea since October 2011 but they passed the ball with the greater incision and fluency in the opening 45 minutes and it was a wonderful finish from Oxlade-Chamberlain.
(18) In children, the BNT relates more to word knowledge than to retrieval or fluency, and verbal memory appears to be relatively independent of these linguistic functions.
(19) If it can be assumed that reading fluency correlates with naming latency, then it can be argued that the better beginning reader is more phonologically analytic.
(20) The acquisition of information literacy and fluency will be mandatory techniques for the future practice of medicine and should be taught at the institutional level by faculty sophisticated in the use of information retrieval systems.
Fluently
Definition:
(adv.) In a fluent manner.
Example Sentences:
(1) Novel popout may reflect an automatic orientation of attention away from more fluently unfolding regions of the perceptual field (familiar objects) and toward less fluently unfolding regions (novel objects).
(2) Gordon Brown spoke fluently and even managed some banter with cabinet colleagues.
(3) If you speak three or more languages fluently, will you be three or more times better off?
(4) US diplomats who met him in 2009 noted that Tanda knew French fluently but could speak only "broken, heavily accented English" and that he "struggled" to communicate.
(5) This technique allows the patient to speak fluently without using his hands, to breathe and to swallow without aspirating.
(6) You guys are making me proud.’ This is something I have not seen before and as a player it gives you a lot of belief in your manager.” Ighalo is speaking freely and fluently but that changes when our conversation switches to his childhood.
(7) Renowned for his wit, he could speak four languages fluently and, during the late 40s and early 50s, squired a succession of jet-setting beauties, including socialite Pamela Digby Churchill Harriman, Rita Hayworth and Anita Ekberg.
(8) Neuropsychological profiles of kindergarten children who were reading fluently with understanding were compared with those of both chronological age controls and reading level controls.
(9) When making their calls, shy Ss sounded somewhat less warm and confident than did not-shy Ss, and they also spoke less fluently.
(10) Sections of stutterers' speech were extracted from clauses which were spoken completely fluently (control) or contained one stutter (experimental).
(11) The American Thoracic Society (ATS) respiratory disease questionnaire for adults was translated by two fluently bilingual Quebec health professionals into simple, everyday French easily understood by an adult population of varying age and educational background.
(12) In the absence of such cerebellar signals, the frontal cortex would have to perform these procedures less rapidly and fluently.
(13) The intestinal epithelium stops to be fluently replaced after the irradiation.
(14) One year later, most of their neuropsychological signs disappeared except for mild difficulties in speaking fluently and recalling words.
(15) He also wants to talk about his passion for Italian literature, and after our interview, we maintain a gratifying correspondence in the language we both love, which he reads and writes fluently.
(16) The method of repeated readings using audiotaped material was implemented in the present study by having poor readers aged 9-13 years listen to and read audiotaped stories until the passages could be read fluently without the tape.
(17) Spectrographic analysis showed that although abnormal consonant duration and C-V formant transitions characterized the initial segment of the stuttered word, the remainder of the word is identical to its identical to its fluently produced counterpart.
(18) The patient spoke all three languages fluently before the operation.
(19) Of course he knew what he was doing: he could speak Spanish fluently; he had studied the Mexican championship and found out that it had nothing to envy Ligue 1 in terms of technical level and competitivity.
(20) [One distinctive and disarming fact about Ms Figueres: not only does she speak many languages fluently, she has one quite blue and one very brown eye].