Speaking and SpeechesDaye, 1947 - 279 pàgines |
Des de l'interior del llibre
Resultats 1 - 3 de 30.
Pàgina 31
... spoken language has many more sounds than the alphabet has letters . Hardly any person forms all of them correctly without special training . And no wonder , since there is hardly any sound which is immune to misarticulation . The scope ...
... spoken language has many more sounds than the alphabet has letters . Hardly any person forms all of them correctly without special training . And no wonder , since there is hardly any sound which is immune to misarticulation . The scope ...
Pàgina 81
... spoken with high breath pressure . The weaker and unstressed syllables lean against their stronger neighbors with ever - lessening power ; the unstressed syllable imme- diately preceding the next stressed one is spoken with the lowest ...
... spoken with high breath pressure . The weaker and unstressed syllables lean against their stronger neighbors with ever - lessening power ; the unstressed syllable imme- diately preceding the next stressed one is spoken with the lowest ...
Pàgina 130
... spoken and heard his words . There is , however , a basic difference between written and spoken language , which will be explained in a later chapter . * 2. Memorization . The effect does not change much when the lecture has been ...
... spoken and heard his words . There is , however , a basic difference between written and spoken language , which will be explained in a later chapter . * 2. Memorization . The effect does not change much when the lecture has been ...
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