Read your audio, LLC


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Read Types



Strict Verbatim, Light Verbatim,
or Clean Verbatim



Strict Verbatim
Read





Keep All Spoken Words:

  • Filler Words (ahs, uhs, ums) (mm-hmm, mm-mm, uh-huh, uh-uh - when not answering a direct question)
  • Discourse Markers ("like," "you know," "I mean," "..., right.", "..., okay.")
  • Repeated Words
  • Stutters/Stammers
  • False Starts
  • Changes of Thought


Light Verbatim
Read





Keep Some Spoken Words:

  • Discourse Markers ("like," "you know," "I mean," "..., right.", "..., okay.")
  • False Starts
  • Changes of Thought

Omit:

  • Filler Words (ahs, uhs, ums) (mm-hmm, mm-mm, uh-huh, uh-uh - when not answering a direct question)
  • Stutters/Stammers
  • Repeated Words


Clean Verbatim
Read





Omit All Unnecessary Words

(making it easy to read):

  • Filler Words (ahs, uhs, ums) (mm-hmm, mm-mm, uh-huh, uh-uh - when not answering a direct question)
  • Discourse Markers ("like," "you know," "I mean," "..., right.", "..., okay.")
  • Repeated Words
  • Stutters/Stammers
  • False Starts
  • Changes of Thought


Read type examples



Filler
Words





"Ah, well, um, she said she was, uh, laughing at his jokes even though they, um, weren't very funny."


"We can, uh, get to that, um, in just a moment."



Discourse
Markers





"Well, like, he was, you know, asleep when he, like, coughed because, I mean, he was, like, sick at the time."


"So that's how you complete that equation, right. So, on to the next question."


"Last week, we studied Commutative Property, okay. This week we're studying Associative Property, right. Next week, we'll tackle the last property, which is Distributive Property, okay."

​(all are making statements, not asking any questions)



Repeated
Words





"I can verify that, that, that he was correct when he said, he said he was drunk that night."


"So can you, can you honestly say the teacher had a, a, a dog in class that day?"



Stutters
&
Stammers





"We can s-s-s-start whenever y-y-y-you're ready."


"That was n-n-n-not at all what you said be-be-before."



False
Starts





"She was going to the store when -- she was going to the store when she got into an accident."


"When we were leaving -- when we were leaving the carnival, the fireworks show started."



Changes
of
Thought





"Every single time we went out -- let me circle back to the first topic at hand."


"The class started taking the test -- the parking lot suddenly filled with police cars."