Pharyngeal phonation describes the use of the pharynx (the throat) as a primary resonating chamber to amplify and shape voice, rather than a site of primary sound production. While actual sound production, or phonation, occurs at the vocal cords in the larynx, the pharynx acts as a crucial funnel and amplifier for the sound produced there, enhancing both the volume and the quality of the voice, particularly in puberphonia treatment. It is a resonating space that vibrates to modify and project the sound created by the vocal folds.
The pharynx doesn't produce sound itself; instead, it's a crucial pathway and amplifier for the sound generated in the larynx.
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