American SpeechLippincott, 1946 - 596 Seiten |
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Seite 185
... EFFECT ORDER . An example of cause and effect order would be a discussion of the crime increase that followed the war , where a convenient and easily understood arrangement would be : I. Causes of postwar crime increase II . Effect on ...
... EFFECT ORDER . An example of cause and effect order would be a discussion of the crime increase that followed the war , where a convenient and easily understood arrangement would be : I. Causes of postwar crime increase II . Effect on ...
Seite 256
... effect , and from effect to effect . Effect to cause . When we argue from effect to cause , we infer from an observed effect that a certain cause , though unobserved , has acted ; as when we see water in the gutters in the morning ...
... effect , and from effect to effect . Effect to cause . When we argue from effect to cause , we infer from an observed effect that a certain cause , though unobserved , has acted ; as when we see water in the gutters in the morning ...
Seite 516
... effect should grow smoothly out of the previous group effect . Grouping is paradoxical , for it must accomplish a mechanical aim and yet it must seem to be natural and just to happen that way . For example , if a man seated on a chair ...
... effect should grow smoothly out of the previous group effect . Grouping is paradoxical , for it must accomplish a mechanical aim and yet it must seem to be natural and just to happen that way . For example , if a man seated on a chair ...
Inhalt
The Place of Speech in a Democracy | 3 |
Everyday Conversation | 9 |
Talking with the Body | 83 |
Urheberrecht | |
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Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
action ACTIVITIES actor Androclus Appleton-Century Company argument audience Author unknown bells Birthday body Booth Tarkington Boston breathing broadcast Ceres chairman climax color comedy committee Company conversation debate declamation discussion dramatic Edna Ferber effect emotion example expression falling action feel George Kelly give hand head hear high-school students High-voiced girls idea inflection interest interpretation lead character light Linguaphone listen look MACBETH make-up Maxwell Anderson meaning meeting melody microphone mood motion move muscles one-act play organization pause person Philip Barry picture pitch plot poem present problems produce programs pronounced pronunciation Proserpine puppet question radio rehearsals rhythm Rudyard Kipling Samuel French Sara Teasdale scene selection sound speaker speaking spirit gum stage story story-teller talk tell things thought tion tone topics voice vote William Shakespeare words York Zona Gale