Speaking and SpeechesDaye, 1947 - 279 pàgines |
Des de l'interior del llibre
Resultats 1 - 3 de 83.
Pàgina 134
... audience with a brilliant little " impromptu " speech . To pretend improvisation in order to impress the audience , is an innocent but useless and often ridic- ulous hoax . An after - dinner speaker once began , " Unprepared as I am ...
... audience with a brilliant little " impromptu " speech . To pretend improvisation in order to impress the audience , is an innocent but useless and often ridic- ulous hoax . An after - dinner speaker once began , " Unprepared as I am ...
Pàgina 180
... audience may be willing to grant . 7. It is an old and well - tested practice to begin with something the audience likes to hear , especially when in the course of the speech unpleasant things will have to be said . Even the Greek and ...
... audience may be willing to grant . 7. It is an old and well - tested practice to begin with something the audience likes to hear , especially when in the course of the speech unpleasant things will have to be said . Even the Greek and ...
Pàgina 272
... audience . Fundamentally the speaker's appearance should not be striking . If it is too distinctive , deliberately individual , or too fashionable , people suspect a super- ficial dandy or playboy ( read : a glamour girl or social- ite ...
... audience . Fundamentally the speaker's appearance should not be striking . If it is too distinctive , deliberately individual , or too fashionable , people suspect a super- ficial dandy or playboy ( read : a glamour girl or social- ite ...
Frases i termes més freqüents
able accent acoustic pattern actor anapaestic antepenult Ariovistus artistic attention audience auditorium basic become breath Brutus Caesar called certainly course Craig Baird depends effect emotional colors Erlking example exercise expression extemporaneous feelings friend yesterday give hear honorable human voice ideas imagination important impression interest intonation introduction kind language lecture lines listeners live logical logical stress manuscript Mark Antony means melody memory middle pitch mind Minor premise mood nature Nervii never oral orator oratorical outline pause penult platform pleonasm poem possible practice pronunciation proof public speaking radio reason reciting rhythm sentence sound speaker speech spoken story student syllable syllogism talk teacher tell tempo thing thought timbre tion tone colors topic trochaic unstressed usually verse vocal cords voice volume whisper Winston Churchill word group write wrote our friend